Health, religion, and meaning: a culture-centered study of Druze women

Qual Health Res. 2010 Jun;20(6):845-58. doi: 10.1177/1049732310362400. Epub 2010 Feb 24.

Abstract

Against the backdrop of contesting the mainstream biomedical models of health communication, the culture-centered approach suggests dialogic research methodologies to coconstruct meanings of health through direct engagement with cultural communities. In this project, we engaged in in-depth interviews and informal conversations with elderly Druze women and their caregiver daughters to develop an understanding of the intersections of religion and health meanings in the context of aging women in this Lebanese community. Attending to the cultural constructions of health, particularly in religious contexts, opens up the discursive spaces of health communication to alternative cosmologies of health, illness, healing, and curing. Four themes emerged as a result of our grounded theory analysis: health as faith; mistrust, privacy, and modern medicine; polymorphic health experiences; and health as structure. These themes serve as the backdrop for playing out the competing tensions between the local and the global in the realm of interpretations of health meanings.

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Arabs
  • Attitude to Health / ethnology
  • Caregivers
  • Cultural Characteristics*
  • Female
  • Health Behavior / ethnology
  • Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice*
  • Humans
  • Interviews as Topic
  • Lebanon
  • Medicine, Traditional
  • Mother-Child Relations
  • Religion*
  • Trust
  • Women's Health / ethnology*