Freedom of choice, expressions of gratitude: Patient experiences of short-term surgical missions in Guatemala

Lack of surgical care has been highlighted as a critical global health problem, and short-term medical missions (STMMs) have become a de facto measure to address this shortfall. Participation in STMMs is an increasingly popular activity for foreign medical professionals to undertake in low- and midd...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social science & medicine (1982) 2018-07, Vol.208, p.117-125
Hauptverfasser: Roche, Stephanie, Brockington, Morgan, Fathima, Sana, Nandi, Meghna, Silverberg, Benjamin, Rice, Henry E., Hall-Clifford, Rachel
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container_end_page 125
container_issue
container_start_page 117
container_title Social science & medicine (1982)
container_volume 208
creator Roche, Stephanie
Brockington, Morgan
Fathima, Sana
Nandi, Meghna
Silverberg, Benjamin
Rice, Henry E.
Hall-Clifford, Rachel
description Lack of surgical care has been highlighted as a critical global health problem, and short-term medical missions (STMMs) have become a de facto measure to address this shortfall. Participation in STMMs is an increasingly popular activity for foreign medical professionals to undertake in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) where their clinical skills may be in short supply. While there is emerging literature on the STMM phenomenon, patient experiences of surgical missions are underrepresented. This research addresses this gap through thirty-seven in-depth interviews with patients or caregivers who received care from a short-term surgical mission within the three years prior to the four-week data collection period in July and August 2013. Interviews were conducted in Antigua, Guatemala and nearby communities, and participants came from 9 different departments of the country. These first-hand accounts of health-seeking through a surgical mission provide important insights into the benefits and challenges of STMMs that patients encounter, including waiting time, ancillary costs, and access to care. Patient agency in care-seeking is considered within the pluralistic, privatized health care context in Guatemala in which foreign participants deliver STMM care. •Unique focus on patients' perspectives of short-term surgical missions.•Contributes to understanding short-term surgical missions within the Guatemalan context.•Identifies benefits and challenges associated with short-term surgical mission care for patients.•Considers patient agency in becoming recipients of aid through use of STMMs.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.05.021
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Attitude to Health
Caregivers
Child
Child, Preschool
Choice Behavior
Clinical skills
Data collection
Emotions
Female
Freedom
Freedoms
Global surgery
Gratitude
Guatemala
Health care access
Health care expenditures
Health problems
Health services
Health services utilization
Help seeking behavior
Humans
Interviews
Low income groups
Male
Medical Missions
Medical personnel
Medicine
Middle Aged
Participation
Patient experiences
Patient satisfaction
Patients
Privatization
Public health
Qualitative Research
Short term
Surgery
Surgical Procedures, Operative
Young Adult
title Freedom of choice, expressions of gratitude: Patient experiences of short-term surgical missions in Guatemala
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