Author:
Vivian Lauraine Margaret Helen,Hunter Cynthia,Tan Lawrence,Comitis George,Neveling Guy,Lawrenson John
Abstract
This medical humanities paper describes our qualitative research into pathways to care and informed consent for 10 children who had cardiac surgery in the Red Cross War Memorial Children’s Hospital, Cape Town, South Africa. Our multidisciplinary team consists of cardiologists, anthropologists, a social scientist and a general practitioner in two sites, South Africa and Australia. This paper builds on our first publication in a specialist cardiology journal on a ‘qualitative snapshot’ of these children’s life stories from 2011 to 2016 but turns to the medical humanities to explore a concept of ‘uncertainty’. Data analysis revealed that for the children’s parents and doctors, ‘uncertainty’ underscored procedures. Indeed, the literature review showed that ‘uncertainty’ is intrinsic to heart surgery and was integral to Barnard’s first heart transplant in Cape Town in 1967. We demonstrate that in meeting the challenges inherent in the ‘uncertainty dimension’, doctors established greater ‘medical certainty’about each operation. This happened as they encountered the difficult clinical and biopsychosocial factors that were fundamental to the diagnosis of children’s cardiac defects. It was doctors’ translation of these decision-making processes that informed parental decisions and described why, despite feelings of uncertainty, parents signed consent. To visually describe heart surgery in this locality we asked the South African photographer, Guy Neveling to record some children undergoing echocardiograms and surgery. These photographs qualitatively demonstrate what medical certainty entails, and parents’ trust in doctors and surgeons, whom they knew had ‘reasonable certainty’ that their child’s ‘heart is worth saving’.
Funder
University of Cape Town
South African Agency for Science and Technology Advancement
Subject
Philosophy,Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Reference39 articles.
1. Anthropological research in clinical settings: role requirements and Adapations;Barnett;Medical Anthropology Quarterly,1985
2. Participatory action research
3. Congenital heart disease: current knowledge about causes and inheritance
4. The world's first human-to-human heart transplant at Groote Schuur Hospital: 50 years later;Brink;South African Medical Journal,2017
5. Brink Johan G , and Hassoulas Joannis . “The first human heart transplant and further advances in cardiac transplantation at Groote Schuur hospital and the University of Cape town.” Cardiovascular journal of Africa 20, no. 1 (2009), 31.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献