Coping with cancer and adversity : Hospital ethnography in Kenya

Open Access
Authors
Supervisors
Cosupervisors
Award date 02-03-2010
ISBN
  • 9789054480921
Number of pages 262
Publisher Leiden: African Studies Centre
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR)
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.
Document type PhD thesis
Note African Studies Collection vol. 22 Research conducted at: Universiteit van Amsterdam
Language English
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