Healthcare Access Experiences Among Indigenous Women in Northern Rural Thailand: A Focused Ethnographic Study

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Onouma Thummapol
Sylvia Barton
Tanya Park

Аннотация

Introduction: Persistent inequities in health and access to healthcare services for indigenous women living in Thailand remain a significant challenge. This study provides narrative accounts of Indigenous women’s experiences accessing healthcare in northern and rural Thailand and explores the complexity of culture and its interaction with multiple intersecting influences on health behaviours.

Methods: A focused ethnographic study was conducted to understand and describe the culture of health behaviors and other cultural phenomena. We recruited 21 female participants aged 20-41 years between March and April of 2017. In-depth semi-structured interviews conducted in Thai were used to explore the experiences of the participants living in a northern rural village. Data analysis was informed and guided by Roper and Shapira’s framework for ethnographic analysis.

Results: Seven themes presented across three phases of experience (pre-access, making choices, and encountering difficulties) revealed an in-depth understanding of the Indigenous women’s lives, the broader sociocultural context in which they lived, and the challenges they faced when accessing healthcare. Analysis of data showed that the participants did not have equal access to healthcare and often disproportionately experienced discriminatory practices and negative attitudes of mainstream healthcare providers.

Conclusions: This is the only study to date that discusses healthcare access challenges experienced by Indigenous women living in a northern rural Thai village. There is an urgent need to focus on citizenship, employment, and general health conditions; gender, familial, and labor roles; specific health conditions, wellness, and cultural practices; the seeking of healthcare services; healthcare provider relationships; the ability to access needed care; and optimization of self-care. Future efforts to improve healthcare access and reduce disease burden might benefit from these findings and allow for the development of more effective strategies, programs, and policies.

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Как цитировать
Thummapol, O., Barton, S., & Park, T. (2018). Healthcare Access Experiences Among Indigenous Women in Northern Rural Thailand: A Focused Ethnographic Study. Central Asian Journal of Global Health, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.5195/cajgh.2018.328
Раздел
Research
Биографии авторов

Onouma Thummapol, University of Alberta, Canada

Onouma is a new PhD graduate in the Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta.

Sylvia Barton, University of Northern British Columbia, Canada

Dr. Sylvia Barton is an associate professor in the School of Nursing, University of Northern British Columbia

Tanya Park, University of Alberta, Canada

Dr. Tanya Park is an assistant professor in the Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta.

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