1. Delivering breast cancer care in urban India: Heterotopia, hospital ethnography and voluntarism.
- Author
-
Macdonald, Alison
- Subjects
- *
CANCER prevention , *CANCER hospitals , *SOCIOECONOMICS , *ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis , *VOLUNTEER service , *MEDICAL care , *SOCIAL medicine , *BREAST tumor treatment , *ETHNOLOGY , *VOLUNTEERS - Abstract
Despite substantial strides to improve cancer control in India, challenges to deliver oncology services persist. One major challenge is the provision and accessibility of adequate infrastructure. This paper offers ethnographic insight on the conceptual and material conditions that are currently shaping the delivery of oncology in Mumbai, focusing specifically on the way India's socio-economic context necessitates non-biomedical acts of voluntarism or 'seva' (selfless service). Developing the premise that hospitals are not identical clones of a biomedical model, detailed attention is paid to the way 'care' emerges through 'praxis of place' (Casey, 2003) within the cancer hospital as a multi-scalar 'heterotopic' (Street and Coleman, 2012) site. Such a perspective enables global/local tensions to come into view, together with the heterogeneous confluence of juxtaposing materialities, imaginations, social practices and values that both propels and constrains the everyday delivery of care. The paper reflects on the theoretical implications of hospital seva in Mumbai in light of social science studies of hospital ethnography and health activism and contributes important ethnographic insight into the current global health debates regarding effective implementation of cancer services in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF