communication and ethics in tuberculosis: new dialogues among the affected people, civil society and...
Post on 03-Jan-2016
214 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
COMMUNICATION AND ETHICS IN TUBERCULOSIS: NEW DIALOGUES AMONG THE AFFECTED PEOPLE, CIVIL SOCIETY AND HEALTH SPECIALISTS
Estela Roeder – María Van der LindePerú - 2009
Purpose of the presentation
Contribute to a reflection and a debate over the role of communication in tuberculosis topic.
Propose a conceptual framework of Communication and its relation to ethics.
Build bridges from previous experience in order to develop the ACSM model.
¿How important is Communication? In relation to health field, it is a vital
issue because communication is dynamic and it helps people create bonds.
A healthy person requires communication to maintain good health.
A sick person requires communication to understand his case, to know about the cure and, eventually, to return to his social life.
…And also a communicative context is required If appropiate environment and scenario
for communication in health care are developed, citizens will fortify themselves and become efficient because information is essential to achieve this.
Knowing about the existence of this atmosphere means to consider research as a starting point.
From uncertainty and social disapproval
Emotional Response
Present and futureuncertainty
RationalResponse
Social punishment
Frustrationfear
ashamed
Risks
Indiference
Individual capacities Faith
Self confidence
Perseverance
Victory
Understand and help others
Self-fulfillment Social commitment
At the beginning of the disease In the stage of treatment continued and sustained
Uncertainty and social disapproval versus strengthening of Individual and social capacities for self-fulfillment
This is due to the fact that…
The community has beliefs about tuberculosis, which are assumed by the sick person.
Tuberculosis is a contagious and incurable disease and there is a fear of contagion
In the case of the person affected by TB: he feels guilty about the disease, depressed, and without plans for the future.
The person affected by tuberculosis defines himself as guilty and condemn himself.
Emotions and daily speech of a person affected by TB
fear
ashamed
helplessness
sadness
nothing
Tranquillness
happiness
pleased
confidence
Discourse on refusalof being the owner
of his life
Discourse onconfirmation of
emotional equilibriumand as a social
individual
information entropy
At the beginning of TB
Treatment
Information balance
Self-perception of stigmatization
From existential emptiness to recognition as a social individual
From the phrase “without time to live” to the discourse “to contribute and to fortify my social networks for the sake of society”
I am sick and
tubercular
I am impatient,
afraid, frustrated, shamed.
I do not have enough time
People do not
understand me, are
selfish and reject me.
People mistreat me,
go away, leave me isolated, reject me,
discriminate me, they are unconscious,
indifferent
I can be cured with treatment I save my life
I feel emotion, strong,
confident, I am informed, I am important,
I am accepted, capable of
making decisions, I am aware, I have dignity
I change, I have the
intention, I make a
commitment
I am kind to others, warm, gentle, loving,
understanding, I want to encourage,
support, help others. I feel close
to them
Misinformed
Communicated
Dehumanized
I recover my humanity
To
pass
fro
m e
mba
rras
smen
t to
dig
nity
From a misinformed individual to an empowered one who communicates others how to confront TB
Some items about health care staff We can find two discourses and attitudes
that coexist in a health care center. On one hand, a rational fear, because
health care staff knows about the contagion process, the stages of tuberculosis, and the cure.
On the other hand, an irrational fear, when health care staff has little information on the topic and blame the patient for being a carrier.
That is the reason why Communication must be developed under two aspects.
Rational, it is surmountable thanks to information and knowledge adquisition
Irrational, it is about information and “demythologization”. On the field of education, in a subjective way, it would be motivation and involvement.
In both of them, the key topics are: values, ethics, and citizenship.
Important conclusions
A change of paradigm in order to struggle against stigma and discrimination, which starts in health care services: Uncertainty and distrust versus solidarity and commitment.
Stigmatization is due to a lack of information and communication strategies that can create communicative contexts and actions of social communication with community and family.
Challenges
Support and complementation of the communicative strategies are nuclear factors that determine the accomplishments and results. This has been demonstrated by the work performed by the Control of Tuberculosis Program (CTP) and the organized community: the communicative actions reinforced and/or maintained the strategies of respiratory symptomatic identification.
Challenges
Involvement and commitment from multiple sectors, to obtain greater effectiveness of the strategies and the sustainability of the interventions. In order to have an approach to TB as a complex problem with multiple causes that requires the coordinated operation of state actors.
Challenges
Participation of people affected by TB is essential in the fight against tuberculosis. Their participation means feeling solidarity with other patients, information dissemination, personal testimonies and stories based on the experiences in the treatment process, particularly in multi-drug resistant TB, the follow-up and supervision of the completion of the treatment.
Challenges
Affected people participation also must occur at a level of design of communication strategies and activities. Their experience and perception of the disease make them become valid informants.
Research is a key activity, on the perception and practices of people, their concepts about the problem, the process of personal decision making, as well as the interactive scenarios.
Challenges
Advocacy is a necessary instrument to mobilize decision makers and population for the prevention of tuberculosis.
Communication experiences should be evaluated and related to epidemiology indicators. ACSM must select its own indicators and develop its monitoring system.
Approaches to citizenship and human rights should be included in the communication strategies to face and reduce stigma. Ethics is what gives sense to these approaches.
top related