选择特雷罗的女人。里约热内卢精神卫生保健的护理和医疗景观。

IF 1.5 4区 社会学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY Anthropology & Medicine Pub Date : 2022-12-01 DOI:10.1080/13648470.2022.2144131
Manuela R Müller, Francisco Ortega, Angel Martínez-Hernáez
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引用次数: 0

摘要

巴西精神卫生保健改革将精神卫生理解为一个复杂的社会过程。在国内有大量的文献生产,重点是去机构化政策、精神健康的社会决定因素和人权,然而,在拉丁美洲边界之外很少得到承认。此外,在巴西的辩论中,精神痛苦的文化层面被忽视,这限制了对卫生保健和用户包容的进一步理解。本文旨在讨论巴西精神卫生保健中的文化决定因素的作用。我们跟踪了里约热内卢市的一位病人,她根据自己的宗教信仰选择了治疗——在巴西黑人乌班达宗教的背景下使用死藤水——而不是像往常一样治疗心理健康。我们利用autoatención(在非专业背景下的自我、家庭和团体护理)和医疗景观的概念来研究治疗谈判如何反映具体的文化特征以及塑造治疗空间的社会和政治决定因素。我们认为,认识到社会文化差异和治疗谈判是使更具包容性的卫生实践的关键因素。此外,这种认识使人们能够确定和推理构成卫生做法的更广泛的社会进程。这场辩论与巴西的精神卫生背景和其他情况有关,特别是那些地方和全球精神卫生知识和做法相互纠缠的情况。
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The woman who chose the terreiro. Lay care and medical landscapes in mental health care in Rio de Janeiro.

Brazilian mental health care reform understands mental health as a complex social process. There is a large literature production within the country focused on deinstitutionalization policy, social determinants of mental health and human rights, however, with little recognition beyond Latin American borders. In addition, cultural dimensions of mental suffering have been neglected in Brazilian debates which limits an expanded understanding of health care and users' inclusion. This paper aims to discuss the role of cultural determinants in mental health care in Brazil. We followed a patient in the city of Rio de Janeiro who opted for therapy based on her religious beliefs-using ayahuasca in the context of the Afro Brazilian religion of Umbanda-over the treatment-as-usual in mental health. We draw on the notions of autoatención (self, domestic, and group-care in lay contexts) and medical landscapes to examine how therapeutic negotiations reflect embodied cultural traits and both social and political determinants shaping therapeutic spaces. We argue that recognizing sociocultural differences and therapeutic negotiations are key elements in making a more inclusive health practice. Moreover, this recognition enables identifying and reasoning the broader social processes framing health practices. This debate is relevant to the Brazilian mental health context and to other scenarios, especially those where local and global knowledge and practices in mental health are entangled.

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CiteScore
2.90
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0.00%
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13
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