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Chasing spirits: Clarifying the spirit child phenomenon and infanticide in Northern Ghana
- Source :
- Social Science & Medicine. 71:608-615
- Publication Year :
- 2010
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2010.
-
Abstract
- In the Kassena-Nankana District of Ghana, researchers and health interventionists describe a phenomenon wherein some children are subject to infanticide because they are regarded as spirit children sent "from the bush" to cause misfortune and destroy the family. This phenomenon remains largely misunderstood and misrepresented. Based upon both ethnographic research and verbal autopsy data from 2006 to 2007 and 2009, this paper clarifies the characteristics of and circumstances surrounding the spirit child phenomenon, the role it plays within community understandings of childhood illness and mortality, and the variations present within the discourse and practice. The spirit child is a complex explanatory model closely connected to the Nankani sociocultural world and understandings surrounding causes of illness, disability, and misfortune, and is best understood within the context of the larger economic, social, and health concerns within the region. The identification of a child as a spirit child does not necessarily indicate that the child was a victim of infanticide. The spirit child best describes why a child died, rather than how the death occurred. In addition to shaping maternal and child health interventions, these findings have implications for verbal autopsy assessments and the accuracy of demographic data concerning the causes of child mortality.
- Subjects :
- Male
Pediatrics
medicine.medical_specialty
Health (social science)
Infanticide
Explanatory model
Poison control
Context (language use)
Criminology
Ghana
Suicide prevention
Congenital Abnormalities
History and Philosophy of Science
Social medicine
Cause of Death
Infant Mortality
medicine
Humans
Sociology
Child
Medicine, African Traditional
Anthropology, Cultural
Poisoning
Infant, Newborn
Infant
Verbal autopsy
humanities
Infant mortality
Child mortality
Child, Preschool
Child Mortality
Female
Attitude to Health
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 02779536
- Volume :
- 71
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Social Science & Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....523e0e439d215ccff2826d5b2b365b8d