Global health researchers often approach Traditional, Complementary, and Alternative Medicine (TCAM) from a health efficacy perspective, asking whether the presence of plural medical systems helps or hinders the uptake of biomedicine. Medical anthropologists, by contrast, typically emphasize how plural medical systems encourage us to rethink health ontologies-that is, who and what comes to constitute the experience of health and illness, and through which practices. Building on both approaches, we explore the role of "healers," a term we use to encompass several different kinds of TCAM providers, in the sexual and reproductive healthcare (SRH) of young people from southcentral Uganda, a region well known as an HIV/AIDS epicenter. Drawing from ethnographic data, we describe three reasons that young people seek SRH from healers. First, they associate stigma, scarcity, and high costs with biomedical SRH. Second, healers work across biomedical and non-biomedical therapeutic divides, prescribing herbs for sexually transmitted infections while simultaneously referring clients to biomedical HIV clinics. Third, healers provide counseling focused on pleasurable and economically-motivated sex. Because these therapies diverge from international and national HIV prevention messaging that frames non-marital and transactional sex in terms of danger and disease, healers' holistic approach to SRH may help to reconstitute the meaning, practice, and experience of "sexual health" in contemporary Uganda. This has important implications for improving global SRH programs and for understanding the continued appeal of TCAM more generally.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.114756 | DOI Listing |
Pol J Vet Sci
June 2024
Department of Animal Biochemistry and Biotechnology, University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn, Oczapowskiego 5, 10-718 Olsztyn-Kortowo, Poland.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the quality parameters and selected biochemical markers of canine semen sampled at 24-h intervals over a period of 5 days, preceded by 6 months of sexual abstinence. Full ejaculates were obtained from 6 dogs. Ejaculate volume and total sperm counts in the ejaculate decreased gradually on successive sampling days.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWomens Health Rep (New Rochelle)
December 2024
Department of Family Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Purpose: Many reproductive age women, cared for routinely by primary care providers (PCPs), would benefit from interconception care, yet a minority of primary care visits include interconception care. This study assessed barriers to providing interconception care from the perspective of primary care clinicians, staff, and patients.
Materials And Methods: Clinicians ( = 11), staff ( = 14), and patients eligible for interconception care ( = 6) from three primary care clinics in Chicago, Illinois participated in focus groups or interviews.
Cureus
November 2024
Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Faculty of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Yaoundé I, Yaoundé, CMR.
Background: Unsafe abortions represent a significant public health issue in Cameroon, often resulting in severe health consequences. This study aimed to investigate the prevalence, motivations, and factors associated with unsafe abortions among women in Yaoundé, Cameroon.
Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted among women of childbearing age attending three urban health facilities in Yaoundé, Cameroon.
Front Reprod Health
December 2024
Department of Bacteriology, Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research, University of Ghana, Accra, Ghana.
Introduction: Adolescent girls are more sensitive to hormonal imbalance with major impact on their nutritional, reproductive, physical, psychosocial, and academic wellbeing. This study explored adolescent girls' knowledge and perceptions of causes and management of symptoms of hormonal imbalance.
Materials And Methods: Using a qualitative approach, focus group discussions were conducted with 116 assented in-school adolescent girls aged 10-19 years between 3rd and 19th October 2022.
J Pediatr Adolesc Gynecol
December 2024
University of Colorado School of Medicine, Section of Adolescent Medicine, 12631 E 17th Ave B198-2, Aurora, CO, 80045. Electronic address:
Study Objective: Adolescents and young adults (AYA) with chronic medical conditions (CMC) have similar sexual behaviors to their healthy peers but are less likely to use contraception. Provision of CMC-specific sexual and reproductive health (SRH) care within pediatric subspecialty clinics may improve access for this population, although system and provider level barriers exist. The purpose of this cross-sectional study was to assess the attitudes, practices, and knowledge of SRH among providers in a variety of pediatric subspecialities.
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