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“There is a human being there”: A critical pedagogic approach to shift perceptions of patient worthiness in South Africa

Socially marginalized individuals in South Africa may be deemed unworthy of scarce resources to promote health and treat illness. Perceptions of patients' relative worthiness impacts health seeking behaviour and outcomes: those deemed unworthy may receive inferior care or be denied health services a...

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Main Author: Jacobson, Sara Ilyse
Other Authors: Weiss, Rachel
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Health Sciences Education 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Jacobson, Sara Ilyse
author2 Weiss, Rachel
author_browse Jacobson, Sara Ilyse
Weiss, Rachel
author_facet Weiss, Rachel
Jacobson, Sara Ilyse
author_sort Jacobson, Sara Ilyse
collection Thesis
description Socially marginalized individuals in South Africa may be deemed unworthy of scarce resources to promote health and treat illness. Perceptions of patients' relative worthiness impacts health seeking behaviour and outcomes: those deemed unworthy may receive inferior care or be denied health services altogether. Current in-service learning strategies to address unequal treatment in the Primary Health Care facility have not resolved the problem. There is a gap in the literature regarding why perceptions of patient worthiness persist among clinicians in the Global South, and among nurses in particular. This study utilized a critical participatory action research methodology whereby a group of nurses and cross-border migrants - a socially marginalized population in South Africa - engaged in dialogue and critical reflection over a period of one year. Findings indicate that perceptions of worthiness are informed by sociocultural and historic factors that promote the practice of shifting blame for systemic failures onto individuals. Worthiness determinations on the part of clinicians, support staff, and patients from the general population justify dehumanizing actions that harm socially marginalized patients, maintain social and institutional hierarchies, and preserve the unequal status quo. Shifting perceptions of socially marginalized people from stereotypic characters to dynamic individuals is humanizing, and therefore vital to dissuade the practice of triaging patients on the basis of perceived worthiness. Critical reflection on problematic assumptions, motivations, and beliefs through dialogue provides an alternative to traditional in-service training; it holds promise as a strategy to deter worthiness determinations and counter the motive to justify unequal systems. It is essential that facilitators of dialogue-based strategies foster a learning environment in which participants feel free to listen and speak without judgment. Provision of opportunities for learners to consider the perspectives of others through narrative or theatrical activities is equally important, if perceptions of worthiness are to shift.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
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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 2026
publishDateRange 2026
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publisherStr Department of Health Sciences Education
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42890 “There is a human being there”: A critical pedagogic approach to shift perceptions of patient worthiness in South Africa Jacobson, Sara Ilyse Weiss, Rachel Reid, Steve health workforce health equity in-service learning critical reflection dialogue socially marginalised participatory action research Socially marginalized individuals in South Africa may be deemed unworthy of scarce resources to promote health and treat illness. Perceptions of patients' relative worthiness impacts health seeking behaviour and outcomes: those deemed unworthy may receive inferior care or be denied health services altogether. Current in-service learning strategies to address unequal treatment in the Primary Health Care facility have not resolved the problem. There is a gap in the literature regarding why perceptions of patient worthiness persist among clinicians in the Global South, and among nurses in particular. This study utilized a critical participatory action research methodology whereby a group of nurses and cross-border migrants - a socially marginalized population in South Africa - engaged in dialogue and critical reflection over a period of one year. Findings indicate that perceptions of worthiness are informed by sociocultural and historic factors that promote the practice of shifting blame for systemic failures onto individuals. Worthiness determinations on the part of clinicians, support staff, and patients from the general population justify dehumanizing actions that harm socially marginalized patients, maintain social and institutional hierarchies, and preserve the unequal status quo. Shifting perceptions of socially marginalized people from stereotypic characters to dynamic individuals is humanizing, and therefore vital to dissuade the practice of triaging patients on the basis of perceived worthiness. Critical reflection on problematic assumptions, motivations, and beliefs through dialogue provides an alternative to traditional in-service training; it holds promise as a strategy to deter worthiness determinations and counter the motive to justify unequal systems. It is essential that facilitators of dialogue-based strategies foster a learning environment in which participants feel free to listen and speak without judgment. Provision of opportunities for learners to consider the perspectives of others through narrative or theatrical activities is equally important, if perceptions of worthiness are to shift. 2026-02-23T07:23:57Z 2026-02-23T07:23:57Z 2025 2026-02-23T07:19:54Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral Doctoral http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42890 en eng application/pdf Department of Health Sciences Education Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle health workforce
health equity
in-service learning
critical reflection
dialogue
socially marginalised
participatory action research
Jacobson, Sara Ilyse
“There is a human being there”: A critical pedagogic approach to shift perceptions of patient worthiness in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title “There is a human being there”: A critical pedagogic approach to shift perceptions of patient worthiness in South Africa
title_full “There is a human being there”: A critical pedagogic approach to shift perceptions of patient worthiness in South Africa
title_fullStr “There is a human being there”: A critical pedagogic approach to shift perceptions of patient worthiness in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed “There is a human being there”: A critical pedagogic approach to shift perceptions of patient worthiness in South Africa
title_short “There is a human being there”: A critical pedagogic approach to shift perceptions of patient worthiness in South Africa
title_sort there is a human being there a critical pedagogic approach to shift perceptions of patient worthiness in south africa
topic health workforce
health equity
in-service learning
critical reflection
dialogue
socially marginalised
participatory action research
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42890
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