The gendered micropolitics of hiding and disclosing: assessing the spread and stagnation of information on two new EMTCT policies in a Malawian village

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: The gendered micropolitics of hiding and disclosing: assessing the spread and stagnation of information on two new EMTCT policies in a Malawian village
المؤلفون: Janneke Verheijen
المصدر: Health Policy and Planning. 32:1309-1315
بيانات النشر: Oxford University Press (OUP), 2017.
سنة النشر: 2017
مصطلحات موضوعية: Rural Population, Malawi, Cash transfers, Psychological intervention, HIV Infections, Pilot Projects, Context (language use), Disclosure, 03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine, Pregnancy, Political science, Humans, 030212 general & internal medicine, Motivation, Potential impact, Divergence (linguistics), Information Dissemination, business.industry, 030503 health policy & services, Health Policy, Information sharing, Prenatal Care, Awareness, Public relations, Delivery, Obstetric, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical, Silence, Intervention (law), Anti-Retroviral Agents, Female, 0305 other medical science, business, Social psychology
الوصف: Analysing why certain information spreads-or not-can be highly relevant for understanding an intervention's potential impact. Two recently implemented policy changes related to EMTCT (elimination of mother-to-child transmission of HIV) in the Balaka district of Malawi give ample opportunity to assess how new information trickles through a targeted rural community. One of the policies entails the lifetime provision of ART (anti-retroviral therapy) to all HIV+ pregnant women-a governmental strategy to EMTCT first initiated in Malawi and now being expanded throughout the region. The second new policy concerns a pilot project in which women are financially rewarded for attending antenatal care and delivering in the hospital. An in-depth anthropological approach was used to assess what women in one village community know about the policy changes and how they had come to know about it. Although the policies were implemented more or less at the same time, awareness and knowledge levels among village women differed largely: In case of the first, awareness stagnated at the level of those who directly received the information from health professionals. In the case of the second, highly accurate and up-to-date knowledge had spread throughout the village community. I suggest three reasons for this divergence: (i) perceived talk-worthiness of (issues addressed by) the interventions, (ii) motives for hiding or disclosing involvement in either of the interventions and (iii) the visibility of each intervention, or in other words, the (im)possibility to hide involvement. I argue that these reasons for women's structural silence on one policy change and prompt sharing of information on another follow a distinctly gendered logic. The findings underline that the diffusion of new information is to a great extent shaped by the social particularities of the context in which it is introduced.
تدمد: 1460-2237
0268-1080
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::810b3f2a89083bba817625540a1efa69
https://doi.org/10.1093/heapol/czx088
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....810b3f2a89083bba817625540a1efa69
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE