Coping with cancer and adversity : Hospital ethnography in Kenya
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| Award date | 02-03-2010 |
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| Number of pages | 262 |
| Publisher | Leiden: African Studies Centre |
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| Abstract |
Many people associate hospital treatment with ‘getting better’, the restoration to health and normal life. The onset of a lifethreatening disease such as cancer, however, can transform the hospital into a place of constant struggle and suffering. Hospitalisation in this sense coincides with the deterioration of patients’ and their families’ overall wellbeing. Drawing on twelve months of ethnographic research in a cancer ward in Kenya, this monograph shows that patients’ suffering should be viewed within the context of a wider spectrum of adversity. The book demonstrates the ambiguity of a hospital stay and treatment, showing how a hospital can both alleviate as well as increase human suffering. The author advocates patient-centred hospital ethnography as a way to improve the understanding of cancer patients’ needs, both medical and nonmedical, as they struggle to restore their wellbeing.
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| Document type | PhD thesis |
| Note | African Studies Collection vol. 22 Research conducted at: Universiteit van Amsterdam |
| Language | English |
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