Community feedbacks on COVID-19 restrictive measures and health risk management decolonization perspectives: a socio-anthropological study

Author:

Genda Eben-Ezer1,Muhindo Justin Bahati1,Cibogo Nadège Felista1,Bahizire Marcel Rhushenge1,Antoine-Moussiaux Nicolas2,Coppieters Yves3,Irenge Christian Ahadi4,Bushenyula Parfait Kaningu5

Affiliation:

1. Université Officielle de Bukavu, Democratic Republic of the Congo

2. Université de Liège

3. Université de Bruxelles

4. Université Officielle de Bukavu

5. Institut Supérieur de Développement Rural, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Abstract

Abstract Background Central African countries face global health problems caused by emerging diseases that have significant social and economic impacts such as Ebola, COVID-19, HIV/AIDS, Chikungunya, Rift Valley Fever, Avian Influenza, Newcastle Disease, etc. The efficient management of emerging diseases often involves restrictive and constraining responses to fundamental rights, which require long-lasting social and health security schemes. The governments have not yet been able to establish these schemes in Central African countries. In this difficult conjuncture, it is important to question the integration of the situations of poor communities as well as the responsibilities in view of the decolonization of health management strategies. Particularly, the COVID-19 pandemic has led governments to apply restrictive control measures that have required a sudden behavioral change in the population. For organizational learning, it is necessary to analyze situations of resistance to COVID-19 response measures. Using a socio-anthropological survey and a literature review this paper provides a retrospective community feedback and perspectives from the first wave COVID-19 restrictive measures in Bukavu city, South Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo.Methods A qualitative study was conducted between April and July 2020 in Bukavu town, South Kivu, DR Congo. We used a socio-anthropological survey and a literature review. A total of 86 individual interviews lasting a maximum of one hour and 5 focus groups were conducted in the three communes (Ibanda, Bagira and Kadutu) of the city of Bukavu. Various stakeholders have participated to the survey such as unformal drug seller, students, shopkeeper, household responsible, state health agencies workers, unemployed youth, clinical healthcare providers, housewives, adult without schooling, a lawyer and clinical healthcare providers in the COVID-19 treatment center. These interviewed actors were selected through convenience sampling. First, they were selected based on their availability and willingness to participate in the study. Also, the informants were targeted according to the information we aimed to collect from them. The theme explored during the individual interview and focus group was the community perception on restrictive COVID-19 measures and behaviors risks; and the factors that represent obstacles to the adoption of the response measure. The interview recordings were translated and transcribed. We used the thematic analysis method to progressively present and discuss the survey results by identifying recurring themes from the data.Results: This work present cases of the community members understanding of the scientific characteristics of COVID-19, their perceptions about the geographical emerging of the Covid-19 pandemic, their business opinions on the emergence of COVID-19 and the cultural and religious labeling of the pandemic. Also, community feedback on restrictive COVID-19 measures is enhanced and explicitly puts forward the expectations and suggestions, constraints to implement these measures. Moreover, it’s raised from the stakeholder’s opinions, the perspective for decolonizing the strategies and resources in health risk management. In this regard, the analyze emphasis on the key role of stakeholders from the south in the dialog for change aiming at decolonizing the health risk communities’ perceptions, strategies and resources.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference25 articles.

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