4.4 Article

'We don't use the same ways to treat the illness:' A qualitative study of heterogeneity in health-seeking behaviour for acute gastrointestinal illness among the Ugandan Batwa

Journal

GLOBAL PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 17, Issue 8, Pages 1757-1772

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/17441692.2021.1937273

Keywords

Indigenous health; Batwa; Uganda; acute gastrointestinal illness; health-seeking behaviour

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research/Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada/Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (CIHR/NSERC/SSHRC)
  2. International Development Research Council (IDRC) Tri-Council Initiative on Adaptation to Climate Change, Indigenous Health Adaptation to Climate Change (IHACC), [IDRC] [106372-003, 106372-004, 106372-005]
  3. CIHR Open Operating Grant, Adaptation to health effects of climate change among Indigenous Peoples in the global south (IP-ADAPT) [298312]
  4. Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship (CIHR)

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The Batwa in Kanungu District, Uganda, face diverse health-seeking behaviors for acute gastrointestinal illness, influenced by physical and economic access to care, as well as perceived efficacy and quality of care. Barriers exist for Batwa individuals in accessing both biomedical and Indigenous healthcare, impacting their healthcare decisions and outcomes.
The Batwa (Twa), an Indigenous People of southwest Uganda, were evicted from their ancestral forest lands in 1991 due to establishment of the Bwindi Impenetrable Forest. This land dispossession forced Batwa to transition from a semi-nomadic, hunting-gathering livelihood to an agricultural livelihood; eliminated access to Indigenous food, medicines, and shelter; and shifted their healthcare options. Therefore, this exploratory study investigated why Batwa choose Indigenous or biomedical treatment, or no treatment, when experiencing acute gastrointestinal illness. Ten gender-stratified focus groups were conducted in five Batwa settlements in Kanungu District, Uganda (n = 63 participants), alongside eleven semi-structured interviews (2014). Qualitative data were analysed thematically, using a constant comparative method. Batwa emphasised that health-seeking behaviour for acute gastrointestinal illness was diverse: some Batwa used only Indigenous or biomedical healthcare, while others preferred a combination, or no healthcare. Physical and economic access to care, and also perceived efficacy and quality of care, influenced their healthcare decisions. This study provides insight into the Kanungu District Batwa's perceptions of biomedical and Indigenous healthcare, and barriers they experience to accessing either. This study is intended to inform public health interventions to reduce their burden of acute gastrointestinal illness and ensure adequate healthcare, biomedical or Indigenous, for Batwa.

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