Connecting political ecology of health and disease with ‘structural stigmatization’: Declining use of forest foods and medicines in Kédougou, Senegal

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2021-09-09 DOI:10.2458/jpe.2996
T. K. Lucey, Kerry E. Grimm
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Abstract

Recent political ecology (PE) frameworks have evolved to identify power disparities that have consequences for human health and disease development. These power disparities can lead to unequal access to health information, natural resources (e.g. farmland, clean water), micronutrients, healthcare, and other elements necessary to maintain healthy bodies and reduce risk of disease. While many PE and political ecology of health and disease (PEHD) frameworks examine access in terms of limitations, few examples highlight effects from increased access to resources. This article uses a PEHD lens to examine how diets and health in rural Kédougou, Senegal are influenced by increased access to globalized foodstuffs and stigmatization of local foods and medicines. A better understanding of dietary decision-making is critical in understudied regions such as Senegal because West Africa has a rapidly expanding population and is projected to be among regions of the world that are most burdened with non-communicable diseases (NCD). We used qualitative methods to: 1) describe current and historic diets in Kédougou; 2) identify perceived changes about diet, health, and access to resources; and 3) understand what might be influencing these changes. Our article shows that increased access and limited access are interconnected because increased, regular access to globalized foods and medicines could factor into reduced access to local foods and medicines. We found that social context strongly influenced use of local forest foods and medicines, even leading to a gradual stigmatization of using these resources.
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将健康和疾病的政治生态与“结构性污名化”联系起来:塞内加尔凯杜古森林食品和药物的使用减少
最近的政治生态学(PE)框架已经演变为识别对人类健康和疾病发展产生影响的权力差距。这些权力差距可能导致获得健康信息、自然资源(如农田、清洁水)、微量营养素、医疗保健和其他维持健康身体和降低疾病风险所需要素的机会不平等。虽然许多PE和健康与疾病政治生态学(PEHD)框架从限制的角度来审查获取,但很少有例子强调资源获取增加的影响。这篇文章使用PEHD的镜头来研究塞内加尔凯杜古农村的饮食和健康是如何受到越来越多的全球化食品和当地食品和药品污名化的影响的。在塞内加尔等研究不足的地区,更好地了解饮食决策至关重要,因为西非人口迅速增长,预计将成为世界上非传染性疾病负担最重的地区之一。我们使用定性方法:1)描述了凯杜古的当前和历史饮食;2) 识别饮食、健康和资源获取方面的感知变化;以及3)了解可能影响这些变化的因素。我们的文章表明,增加获取和限制获取是相互关联的,因为增加、定期获得全球化食品和药品的机会可能会导致减少获得当地食品和药品。我们发现,社会环境强烈影响了当地森林食品和药物的使用,甚至导致对使用这些资源的逐渐污名化。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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