Putting cultural difference in its place: Barriers to access to health services for parents of children with intellectual disability in an urban African setting

Int J Soc Psychiatry. 2022 Dec;68(8):1614-1622. doi: 10.1177/00207640211043150. Epub 2021 Aug 31.

Abstract

Background: Access to appropriate specialist level services for children with intellectual disability is challenging in Africa, with very few services available. Much literature on the utilisation of services by carers of children with intellectual disability in Africa emphasises the supposed incompatibility between indigenous and western beliefs, failing to identify more obvious, embodied barriers to access to care.

Method: As part of a study on children with intellectual disability in Cape Town, South Africa, we interviewed caregivers regarding the difficulties in accessing care, specifically the complex, expensive and time-consuming travelling routes from home to care.

Results: Caregivers discussed the embodied difficulties accessing care. Everyday struggles with transport, and crowded, dangerous and hostile environments were identified as barriers to care.

Conclusion: These challenges are often overlooked in the literature, in favour of an emphasis on cultural difference. This dualistic view of the world may obscure more obvious reasons why people find it difficult to use services, even when they are available.

Keywords: Intellectual disability; access to care; burden; children; cultural differences; transport.

Publication types

  • Comment

MeSH terms

  • Caregivers
  • Child
  • Health Services Accessibility
  • Humans
  • Intellectual Disability* / therapy
  • Parents
  • South Africa