Sorcery and witchcraft beliefs on the front line of public health response in Papua New Guinea and beyond.

IF 1 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Western Pacific Surveillance and Response Pub Date : 2024-09-04 eCollection Date: 2024-07-01 DOI:10.5365/wpsar.2024.15.3.1171
Miranda Forsyth, Joanne Taylor, Tambri Housen, Celeste Marsh, Philip Gibbs, William Kipongi
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Problem: Many communities refer to sorcery or witchcraft to explain misfortunes such as sickness, death and disability. The effects of these beliefs on public health service delivery have long been overlooked. Beliefs in sorcery and witchcraft are significant challenges for health-care workers to understand to deliver better health outcomes and avoid inadvertently triggering accusations of witchcraft that may lead to violence.

Context: This paper examines the impacts of accusations of sorcery and related violence on the provision of health care in Papua New Guinea.

Action: The discussion focuses on a workshop held in Papua New Guinea in September 2022 with health extension officers on the topic of health-care delivery and sorcery accusations.

Lessons learned: The workshop confirmed the challenges that beliefs in sorcery and witchcraft present for health extension officers and suggested several strategies that could be used to navigate them. It identified several possible future measures that those on the front line of community health-care delivery considered most important in responding to the issue. These included educating health-care workers on how to effectively address sorcery beliefs when delivering health care and developing communication techniques on the causes of death and sickness that avoid triggering sorcery accusations.

Discussion: This paper reviews the findings of the workshop in the broader context of the effects of beliefs in witchcraft on public health delivery globally. Because of the close connections between sorcery beliefs and health, equipping health-care workers and field epidemiologists with strategies to address these beliefs effectively is critical to delivering better health care, facilitating timely response to public health events, and helping to prevent violence related to sorcery accusations. This need exists in all countries where sorcery beliefs related to health, illness, disability and death are prevalent.

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在巴布亚新几内亚及其他地区,巫术和巫术信仰处于公共卫生应对措施的前沿。
问题:许多社区用巫术或巫婆来解释疾病、死亡和残疾等不幸。这些信仰对提供公共卫生服务的影响长期以来一直被忽视。医护人员要了解巫术和巫术信仰,以提供更好的医疗服务,避免无意中引发巫术指控,从而导致暴力事件,这对医护人员来说是一项重大挑战:本文探讨了巫术指控和相关暴力对巴布亚新几内亚医疗服务的影响:讨论的重点是 2022 年 9 月在巴布亚新几内亚与卫生推广官员就提供医疗服务和巫术指控这一主题举行的研讨会:研讨会确认了巫术和巫术信仰给卫生推广官员带来的挑战,并提出了几项可用于应对这些挑战的策略。研讨会确定了社区医疗服务第一线人员认为在应对这一问题时最重要的几项未来可能采取的措施。这些措施包括教育卫生保健工作者在提供卫生保健服务时如何有效地应对巫术信仰,以及开发有关死亡和疾病原因的沟通技巧,以避免引发巫术指控:本文从巫术信仰对全球公共卫生服务的影响这一更广阔的背景出发,回顾了研讨会的成果。由于巫术信仰与健康之间的密切联系,让医疗工作者和现场流行病学家掌握有效处理这些信仰的策略对于提供更好的医疗服务、促进对公共卫生事件的及时响应以及帮助预防与巫术指控相关的暴力事件至关重要。在与健康、疾病、残疾和死亡有关的巫术信仰盛行的所有国家,都存在这种需求。
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来源期刊
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊最新文献
Large-scale salmonella outbreak associated with banh mi, Viet Nam, 2024. Sorcery and witchcraft beliefs on the front line of public health response in Papua New Guinea and beyond. Harnessing the power of mobile and messaging apps for risk communication and intervention during the COVID-19 pandemic: lessons from the Western Pacific. Outbreak response capacity of the Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network across WHO's South-East Asia and Western Pacific regions. Surveillance for respiratory viruses in freshwater bodies visited by migratory birds, the Philippines.
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