Thalassemic Women’s Biographical Trajectory: Retracing Gender Inequalities in Health Policies
Underserved and Socially Disadvantaged Groups and Linkages with Health and Health Care Differentials
ISBN: 978-1-83867-055-9, eISBN: 978-1-83867-054-2
Publication date: 30 August 2019
Abstract
Purpose
Scientific reductionism has made sure that the biological phenomena were abstracted from the social and cultural contexts in which they occur. As a result, institutions of medicine and patient care processes have not taken into account the social and cultural determinants of the illness, therefore concealing a Western and masculine norm. Only recently, gender studies have managed to claim importance of the gender in the process of medical practices capable of dealing with diverse health cultures.
This chapter proposes further reflections on gender inequalities in health policy for the care and management of thalassemia, taking into account of the differences in health needs, and gendered experience and meanings of illness. It will analyze the medicalization of the female body in the thalassemia experience.
Methodology/Approach
Qualitative data for this study came from the biographical narratives of 10 thalassemic women in the care of the Polyclinic of Messina (Italy).
Findings
The analysis will highlight an inequality between men and women not only in the degree and modes of medicalization of the bodies but also in the incorporation of an imagination that encages the woman in the necessary role of wife and mother, making the illness an experience particularly dolorous.
Research Limitations/Implications
These findings can help shape health policies in the cure of thalassemia, which take into account gender differences as an indispensable element in the compliance with the therapeutic process.
Originality/Value of Paper
They report on the urgency to deconstruct the social imagination according to which a woman is a “real” woman only if she is also a mother.
Keywords
Citation
Raffa, V. (2019), "Thalassemic Women’s Biographical Trajectory: Retracing Gender Inequalities in Health Policies", Underserved and Socially Disadvantaged Groups and Linkages with Health and Health Care Differentials (Research in the Sociology of Health Care, Vol. 37), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 189-201. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0275-495920190000037014
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2019 Emerald Publishing Limited