Mayhew SH, Balabanova D, Vandi A, Mokuwa GA, Hanson T, Parker M, Richards P. (Re)arranging "systems of care" in the early Ebola response in Sierra Leone: An interdisciplinary analysis.
Soc Sci Med 2021;
300:114209. [PMID:
34247897 PMCID:
PMC9077326 DOI:
10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114209]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 02/09/2021] [Revised: 06/15/2021] [Accepted: 07/02/2021] [Indexed: 11/21/2022]
Abstract
Despite an expanding literature on Ebola-response, few studies detail or reflect on the responses of diverse systems of care. Little is known about how, why or in what ways, strategies of ill-health management were enacted locally, how health-systems power, authority and hierarchy were perceived and contested, or how other social systems, institutions and relationships shaped the response.
This paper presents an interdisciplinary analysis of local responses in two early affected districts in Sierra Leone. Drawing on anthropological theories of social ordering and assemblage, we present an analysis of contrasting infection chains in three extended case studies from Bo and Moyamba districts. In contrast to previous scholarship which has understood local actions as being reactive (supporting or obstructing) to a national Ebola response, we show that local arrangements lead and shape responses. Our cases show how multiple, entangled, dynamic and co-existing systems of care influence these responses. Some individuals and communities collaborated with health authorities on measures like reporting and quarantine, others actively opposed them, or played an intermediary role. Collectively, formal health systems actors, local authorities and ordinary citizens negotiated and enacted new arrangements. These arrangements involved compromise and sometimes power was reconfigured. They were also shaped by wider political and historical contexts and by availability or absence of formal healthcare resources. Our research shows the critical importance of understanding how institutions and people involved in healthcare enact diverse “systems of care” and thereby shape Ebola response. Most importantly, our work underlines the need for alignment between formal health-systems and wider social, cultural, political and economic forms of organisation at family and community levels to improve crisis-response and promote sustainable care. In particular, health systems responders need to identify and engage with key brokers – or arrangers – in frontline care systems, with whom mutually acceptable, and effective, reconfigurations of care can be achieved.
Multiple, dynamic, co-existing systems of care shaped Sierra Leone's Ebola response.
Political/historic context, resources, conflict and compromise all shaped care systems.
Diverse local actors negotiated relationships to reconfigure healthcare arrangements.
It is local arrangements that lead and shape crisis-response at the decentralised level.
Health systems need to engage with “arrangers” to reconfigure locally responsive care.
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