Implementing an Intercultural Birth Care Policy: The Role of Indigenous Identity in Peruvian Maternal Care

2009 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 13-14
Author(s):  
Lucia Guerra‐Reyes
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (21) ◽  
pp. 10409-10415 ◽  
Author(s):  
Justin T. Walsh ◽  
Lisa Signorotti ◽  
Timothy A. Linksvayer ◽  
Patrizia d'Ettorre

2014 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
pp. 369
Author(s):  
Aurora Amélia Brito de Miranda ◽  
Beatriz Gershenson Aguinsky ◽  
Cândida da Costa ◽  
Lisélen de Freitas Avila ◽  
Maria Jacinta Jovino Carneiro da Silva ◽  
...  

O artigo trata das inovações da legislação brasileira na política de atendimento socioeducativo aos adolescentes em conflito com a lei (SINASE), destacando avanços e desafios. Examina o papel da proteção social especial da Política de Assistência Social e do SUAS na execução das medidas socioeducativas. Tem como referência a pesquisa do Estadodo Maranhão (UFMA), articulada ao Mapeamento Nacional do Atendimento Socioeducativo (SDH/PR/CONANDA) e as reflexões da equipe da PUCRS. Afirma diferentes questões a serem enfrentadas pelo atendimento socioeducativo, tais como: o reduzido número e a baixa qualificação dos recursos humanos; a incipiente articulação entre atores do Sistemade Garantia de Direitos; a ausência de intersetorialidade entre as políticas públicas e o reduzido financiamento para as medidas socioeducativas.Palavras-chave: Atendimento socioeducativo, direitos humanos, Política de Assistência Social, adolescentes.ADOLESCENTS IN CONFLICT WITH THE LAW AND HUMAN RIGHTS: challenges to SINASE implementation.Abstract: The article discusses the innovations of Brazilian legislation on social educational care policy to adolescents in conflict with the law (SINASE), highlighting advances and challenges. It examines the role of the special social protection of Social Assistance Policy and the SUAS in the execution of social educational measures. Taking as reference the researchof the State of Maranhão (UFMA), articulated to the national Mapping of Social Educational care (SDH /PR/CONANDA) and the reflections of the team of PUCRS. Different issues are affirmed to be faced by Social Educational care, such as: the reduced number and the low qualification of human resources; the incipient articulation between actors of the Systemof Guaranteed Rights; the absence of intersectoral collaboration among public policies and the reduced funding educative measures.Keywords: Social and educational care, human rights, Social Assistance Policy, adolescents.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Monica Ansu-Mensah ◽  
Frederick I. Danquah ◽  
Vitalis Bawontuo ◽  
Peter Ansu-Mensah ◽  
Desmond Kuupiel

Abstract Background The world aims to achieve universal health coverage by removing all forms of financial barriers to improve access to healthcare as well as reduce maternal and child deaths by 2030. Although free maternal healthcare has been embraced as a major intervention towards this course in some countries in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), the perception of the quality of healthcare may influence utilization and maternal health outcomes. We systematically mapped literature and described the evidence on maternal perceptions of the quality of care under the free care financing policies in SSA. Methods We employed the Arskey and O’Malley’s framework to guide this scoping review. We searched without date limitations to 19th May 2019 for relevant published articles in PubMed, Google Scholar, Web of Science, Science Direct, and CINAHL using a combination of keywords, Boolean terms, and medical subject headings. We included primary studies that involved pregnant/post-natal mothers, free maternal care policy, quality of care, and was conduct in an SSA country. Two reviewers independently screened the articles at the abstract and full-text screening guided by inclusion and exclusion criteria. All relevant data were extracted and organized into themes and a summary of the results reported narratively. The recent version of the mixed methods appraisal tool was used to assess the methodological quality of the included studies. Results Out of 390 studies, 13 were identified to have evidence of free maternal healthcare and client perceived quality of care. All the 13 studies were conducted in 7 different countries. We found three studies each from Ghana and Kenya, two each in Burkina Faso and Nigeria, and a study each from Niger, Sierra Leone, and Tanzania. Of the 13 included studies, eight reported that pregnant women perceived the quality of care under the free maternal healthcare policy to be poor. The following reasons accounted for the poor perception of service quality: long waiting time, ill-attitudes of providers, inadequate supply of essential drugs and lack of potable water, unequal distribution of skilled birth attendants, out-of-pocket payment and weak patient complaint system. Conclusion This study suggests few papers exist that looked at maternal perceptions of the quality of care in the free care policy in SSA. Considering the influence mothers perceptions of the quality of care can have on future health service utilisation, further studies at the household, community, and health facility levels are needed to help unearth and address all hidden quality of care challenges and improve maternal health services towards attaining the sustainable development goals on maternal and child health.


Behaviour ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 136 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reginald Cocroft

Parental care of post-hatching offspring is widespread in insects, but the role of communication in parent-offspring interactions remains largely unknown. I have found that, in the subsocial treehopper Umbonia crassicornis , aggregated nymphal offspring produce substrate-borne, vibrational signals in synchronized bursts that elicit the mother's antipredator behavior. In this study I describe the signals used by nymphs and explore their role in mother-offspring interactions and within-brood communication. Nymphs were stimulated to signal in the laboratory in response to light contact, simulating the approach of a predator. Signals of nymphs at the site of disturbance triggered a rapid wave of signaling by many individuals within the aggregation. This coordinated signaling was associated with the mother's defensive behavior. Signaling was limited to the vibrational channel: when transmission of vibrations was blocked between signaling nymphs and the mother, the mothers' response was abolished. Nymphs signaled not only in response to contact, but also in response to playback of signals from their siblings. Nymphs in otherwise undisturbed aggregations signaled only in response to signals coordinated into synchronized, group displays, and not to signals in random temporal patterns. However, nymphal signaling thresholds were lowered after a recent experience of simulated predation. After a period in which nymphs were stimulated to signal (by light contact simulating a predator's approach), playback of one individual signal could trigger a coordinated burst within the aggregation. It remains unknown if coordination among siblings to produce synchronized, group signals is completely cooperative, or if siblings compete for the mother's proximity. But it is clear that a complex system of communication among siblings, and between siblings and their parent, is an important feature of maternal care in these subsocial insects.


2017 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-18
Author(s):  
Joshua Zwisler

Work in indigenous language revitalization often justifies itself along using one of two arguments: the intrinsic good of diversity and the importance of language in constructing indigenous identity. This article examines the second argument, first analyzing modern trends in the conception of indigenous identity and its link to language, and then uses two recent studies in indigenous language loss from South America and North America to determine the role of indigenous language in the production of indigenous identity. The result is that indigenous language serves as a linguistic mechanism of othering – the creation of an out-group with language as the criterion of exclusivity, and as a means of transmitting a romanticized image of indigenous people through indexicalizing such into indigenous language use. However, this article points out that the debate is far from over and that further research is need in the field of indigeneity and language.


Ethnologies ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 103-130
Author(s):  
Annette de Stecher

“Of Chiefs and Kings” is about the role of Wendat diplomatic traditions, explored through documentary and pictorial evidence and the arts of ceremonial dress. I will describe diplomatic interactions between Wendat and British communities between 1838 and 1842, through which the Wendat affirmed commitments of military and civilian support and asserted a continued Wendat presence in their traditional territories. By their dynamic public representation of Indigenous identity, they denied the romanticized notion of the vanishing race, deeply rooted in the popular imagination. These events marked a particular moment within a Wendat history of diplomatic engagement and intercultural exchange with European leaders, extending back to the early seventeenth century. Wendat and British first-hand accounts furnish perspectives of individual members of each community, while Wendat elders’ recollections of ceremonial traditions give important community knowledge of the significance of these events to the Wendat, at an important time in the history of Wendake and Lower Canada.


1973 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. L. White ◽  
J. H. Murnaghan

Formation of rational health care policies, plans, and priorities by politicians and public administrators requires three kinds of support: analytical competence, purposeful information and intelligence systems, and a responsive research and development capability. This article delineates the role of each of these three activities and discusses how they can be most effectively organized within the government framework, the requisite professional skills, and the contributions of the private sector.


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