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| dc.contributor.author |
Hampshire, Kate |
|
| dc.contributor.author |
Porter, Gina |
|
| dc.contributor.author |
Mariwah, Simon |
|
| dc.contributor.author |
Munthali, Alister |
|
| dc.contributor.author |
Robson, Elsbeth |
|
| dc.contributor.author |
Asiedu, Samuel |
|
| dc.contributor.author |
Abane, Owusu Albert |
|
| dc.contributor.author |
Milner, James |
|
| dc.date.accessioned |
2022-01-26T10:45:06Z |
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| dc.date.available |
2022-01-26T10:45:06Z |
|
| dc.date.issued |
2016 |
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| dc.identifier.issn |
23105496 |
|
| dc.identifier.uri |
http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/7411 |
|
| dc.description |
9p:, ill. |
en_US |
| dc.description.abstract |
Africa’s recent communications ‘revolution’ has generated optimism that using mobile phones for health (mhealth) can help bridge healthcare gaps, particularly for rural, hard-to-reach populations. However, while scale-up of mhealth pilots remains limited, health-workers across the continent possess mobile phones. This article draws on interviews from Ghana and Malawi to ask whether/ how health-workers are using their phones informally and with what consequences. Health workers were found to use personal mobile phones for a wide range of purposes: obtaining help in emergencies; communicating with patients/colleagues; facilitating community-based care, patient monitoring and medication adherence; obtaining clinical advice/information and managing logistics. However, the costs were being borne by the health-workers themselves, particularly by those at the lower echelons, in rural communities, often on minimal stipends/salaries, who are required to ‘care’ even at substantial personal cost. Although there is significant potential for ‘informal mhealth’ to improve (rural) healthcare, there is a risk that the associated moral and political economies of care will reinforce existing socioeconomic and geographic inequalities |
en_US |
| dc.language.iso |
en |
en_US |
| dc.publisher |
University of Cape Coast |
en_US |
| dc.subject |
Care work |
en_US |
| dc.subject |
Community health-workers |
en_US |
| dc.subject |
Mobile phones |
en_US |
| dc.subject |
Moral economy |
en_US |
| dc.subject |
Political economy |
en_US |
| dc.subject |
Sub-Saharan Africa |
en_US |
| dc.subject |
Task shifting |
en_US |
| dc.title |
Who bears the cost of ‘informal mhealth’? Health-workers’ mobile phone practices and associated political-moral economies of care in Ghana and Malawi |
en_US |
| dc.type |
Article |
en_US |
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