• Title/Summary/Keyword: Critical Medical Anthropology

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Critical Approach to Community-Based Health Program: A Case of Paraguay Dengue Prevention Program (지역주민참여 보건프로그램에 대한 비판적 접근: 파라과이 뎅기열 예방 프로그램 '밍가 암비엔탈'의 사례)

  • Gu, Gyoung-Mo
    • Iberoamérica
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    • v.21 no.2
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    • pp.1-23
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    • 2019
  • This study analyzes how the health program is implemented by political and economic factors in the case of Minga Ambiental program in Paraguay. In the field of critical medical anthropology, the practice of health care programs explains that socio-cultural and political and economic factors can be the main variables besides the primary purpose of preventing and eradicating the disease. In the same vein, this study also analyzed how community-based health programs operate by various external factors. As a result, the Minga Ambiental program is a health program called Dengue Fever, which has been tended to be sustained and expanded by various actors, including politicians and corporations in countries and communities, despite concerns about effectiveness. In this case, this study found that health programs can be operated by political and economic relations different from their original purpose, and are intertwined in various social contexts by various actors in constructing health programs.

Comparing the Status of Chronic Diseases between Immigrants and Korean (이주민과 내국인의 만성질환 관리 지표 비교)

  • Seong-Woo Choi;Seong-Eun Kim;Yu-Il Kim;Kyung-Hak Kim;Bong-Kyu Sun;Jin-Hyeong Kim;Jun-Hwi Cho;Sun-Seog Kweon
    • Journal of agricultural medicine and community health
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    • v.49 no.2
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    • pp.93-101
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    • 2024
  • Objective: This study compared the status of chronic diseases among immigrants and the Korean population. Methods: This study was conducted on 153 immigrants living in Gwangju Metropolitan City in 2022. For comparison, 459 Koreans were selected using the 2021 Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (KNHANES). A survey was conducted on the management status of hypertension, diabetes, and hyperlipidemia using a questionnaire. Results: Immigrants were significantly more likely to have hypertension (50.3% vs. 24.2%, p<0.001) and diabetes (19.0% vs. 11.5%, p=0.002) than Koreans. In awareness, immigrants had significantly lower rates of hypertension (57.1% vs. 73.0%, p=0.031) and hyperlipidemia (immigrants 25.4% vs. 44.5%, p=0.006). In treatment rates, immigrants had significantly lower rates of hypertension (40.3% vs. 69.4%, <0.001) and hyperlipidemia (17.9% vs. 39.6%, p=0.003). In control rates, immigrants had significantly lower rates of hypertension (18.2% vs. 62.2%, <0.001) than Koreans. Conclusions: Chronic diseases are common among immigrants, but awareness, treatment, and control rates are low, so education and prevention policies are critical to improving immigrants' access to medical care and raising awareness.