“We smoke the same pipe”: religion and community home-based care for PLWH in rural Swaziland

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Authors

Root, Robin
Van Wyngaard, Arnau
Whiteside, Alan

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Routledge

Abstract

We draw on a study of a church-run community home-based care organization in Swaziland to explore how individuals living with HIV perceived caregivers‘ impact on well-being. Our primary concern was to examine how religion, as a heuristic practice of Christian-based caregiving, was felt to be consequential in a direly underserved region. Part of a larger medical anthropological project, we conducted semi-structured interviews with 79 community home-based care clients, of whom half (53%) said they would have died, some from suicide, without its services. We utilized a critical phenomenological approach to interpret semantic and latent themes, and explicated these themes within a ‗healthworld‘ framework. Participants were resolute that caregivers be Christian, less for ideological positioning than for perceived ontological sameness and ascribed traits: ―telling the truth‖ about treatment, confidentiality, and an ethos of unconditional love that restored clients‘ desire to live and adhere to treatment. Findings are intended to help theorize phenomenological meanings of care, morality, health, and sickness, and to interrogate authoritative biomedically based rationalities that underwrite most HIV-related global health policy.

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Keywords

Africa, Home-based care, Religion, HIV/AIDS, Biomedicine, ART/ARV adherence, Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), Antiretroviral therapy (ART)

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Citation

Robin Root, Arnau Van Wyngaard & Alan Whiteside (2017) “We Smoke the Same Pipe”: Religion and Community Home-Based Care for PLWH in Rural Swaziland, Medical Anthropology, 36:3, 231-245, DOI: 10.1080/01459740.2016.1256885.