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Health and disease in two villages in South-Eastern Lesotho : a social anthropological perspective

Macro morbidity and mortality data identify major disease and health trends for large populations. It is also well known that high infant mortality rates, high incidence of infectious fevers, as well as the variety of diseases commonly associated with malnutrition, are correlated with social conditi...

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Main Author: Heap, Marion
Other Authors: Boonzaier, Emile
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Social Anthropology 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Heap, Marion
author2 Boonzaier, Emile
author_browse Boonzaier, Emile
Heap, Marion
author_facet Boonzaier, Emile
Heap, Marion
author_sort Heap, Marion
collection Thesis
description Macro morbidity and mortality data identify major disease and health trends for large populations. It is also well known that high infant mortality rates, high incidence of infectious fevers, as well as the variety of diseases commonly associated with malnutrition, are correlated with social conditions of poverty. However, these broad trends say little about peoples' experiences of health and disease in conditions of poverty at the grass roots level. This thesis addresses this issue by focusing on how people maintain health and cope with disease in two villages in south-eastern Lesotho. It is primarily a descriptive study of the social dimensions of health and disease-coping strategies in a situation of underdevelopment, where the essential resources pertaining to health, viz food, income, shelter, clean water, and sanitation are inadequate, largely as a result of the historical and on-going political and economic processes beyond the control of the local people. The thesis illustrates that in response to poverty, scarce resources are redistributed via a number of social relationships, in order to provide health for a wide range --of individuals. Thus, there is no clear correlation between material differentiation of households and bett.er access to health. Material differentiation does play some role in recognition of disease and choice of therapy~ This is best illustrated by the fact that extreme poverty limits the ·individual's choice of therapy, and frequently prevents them from adopting the sick role. In contradiction to earlier notions that the 'system of explanation' is the primary factor which determines the individual's utilisation of 'Western' or 'traditional' medical systems, there are numerous other factors which play a role in recognition of disease and choice of therapy, such as cost and availability in a geographic area. Moreover, against a quantitative baseline of the villagers' perceptions of their disease experience, incidences of invocation of the supernatural (such as 'witchcraft') are rare. This suggests that medical anthropology's interest in incidences of supernatural explanation have tended to underplay the extent to which people are able to comprehend and utilise natural explanation. The focus of this study - the relationships between health and disease and natural and supernatural explanation - moves away from the singular disease emphasis of medical anthropology. It is suggested that by viewing disease as 'conflict', many of the problems associated with this approach can be overcome and the interrelationship. Between health and disease re-established.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
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publisher Social Anthropology
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38851 Health and disease in two villages in South-Eastern Lesotho : a social anthropological perspective Heap, Marion Boonzaier, Emile Ethnology Macro morbidity and mortality data identify major disease and health trends for large populations. It is also well known that high infant mortality rates, high incidence of infectious fevers, as well as the variety of diseases commonly associated with malnutrition, are correlated with social conditions of poverty. However, these broad trends say little about peoples' experiences of health and disease in conditions of poverty at the grass roots level. This thesis addresses this issue by focusing on how people maintain health and cope with disease in two villages in south-eastern Lesotho. It is primarily a descriptive study of the social dimensions of health and disease-coping strategies in a situation of underdevelopment, where the essential resources pertaining to health, viz food, income, shelter, clean water, and sanitation are inadequate, largely as a result of the historical and on-going political and economic processes beyond the control of the local people. The thesis illustrates that in response to poverty, scarce resources are redistributed via a number of social relationships, in order to provide health for a wide range --of individuals. Thus, there is no clear correlation between material differentiation of households and bett.er access to health. Material differentiation does play some role in recognition of disease and choice of therapy~ This is best illustrated by the fact that extreme poverty limits the ·individual's choice of therapy, and frequently prevents them from adopting the sick role. In contradiction to earlier notions that the 'system of explanation' is the primary factor which determines the individual's utilisation of 'Western' or 'traditional' medical systems, there are numerous other factors which play a role in recognition of disease and choice of therapy, such as cost and availability in a geographic area. Moreover, against a quantitative baseline of the villagers' perceptions of their disease experience, incidences of invocation of the supernatural (such as 'witchcraft') are rare. This suggests that medical anthropology's interest in incidences of supernatural explanation have tended to underplay the extent to which people are able to comprehend and utilise natural explanation. The focus of this study - the relationships between health and disease and natural and supernatural explanation - moves away from the singular disease emphasis of medical anthropology. It is suggested that by viewing disease as 'conflict', many of the problems associated with this approach can be overcome and the interrelationship. Between health and disease re-established. 2023-09-26T11:56:23Z 2023-09-26T11:56:23Z 1985 2023-09-26T10:52:29Z Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38851 eng application/pdf Social Anthropology Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Ethnology
Heap, Marion
Health and disease in two villages in South-Eastern Lesotho : a social anthropological perspective
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Health and disease in two villages in South-Eastern Lesotho : a social anthropological perspective
title_full Health and disease in two villages in South-Eastern Lesotho : a social anthropological perspective
title_fullStr Health and disease in two villages in South-Eastern Lesotho : a social anthropological perspective
title_full_unstemmed Health and disease in two villages in South-Eastern Lesotho : a social anthropological perspective
title_short Health and disease in two villages in South-Eastern Lesotho : a social anthropological perspective
title_sort health and disease in two villages in south eastern lesotho a social anthropological perspective
topic Ethnology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38851
work_keys_str_mv AT heapmarion healthanddiseaseintwovillagesinsoutheasternlesothoasocialanthropologicalperspective