Diabetic foot (DF) is a leading cause of nontraumatic lower-extremity amputations, premature death, and a sign of social inequality in diabetes treatment. In Mexico, the incidence of DF is on the rise yet little is known about its impact among indigenous people, a disadvantaged group. Based on ethnographic research conducted in Oaxaca and analysis of institutional health-data, in this article we show the health care delays that rural indigenous people face when dealing with DF.
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December 2020
Based on seven months of ethnographic fieldwork in two urban health centres in Oaxaca City, Mexico, this paper analyses the ways in which underprivileged middle-aged and older female patients experience and transform (GAMs), or mutual-aid groups, a public health programme aimed at improving chronic patients' adherence to their biomedical treatments. GAMs work as 'technologies of the self' within the context of the Mexican neoliberal regime and patients are urged to be self-responsible. GAM members regard such urging favourably and act according to their broader understandings of life, which they see as a (struggle) that requires (a polysemic verb alluding to self-care for self-preservation) and hard work in a structurally unequal place characterised by precarity and social unrest.
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April 2018
Rural women in Southern Mexico link their diabetes to distressful life experiences rooted in ordinary violence. While much has been written on the use that diabetes sufferers make of their morbid condition as an idiom of distress, I investigate the personal and social effects that such an idiom has on women. As I illustrate, diabetes reflects an ambivalence that helps women to speak about the unspeakable and, at the same time, reinforces their ideas of culpability, namely that they are to blame for both the gendered violence that they endure and the diabetes from which they suffer.
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