eprintid: 13051 rev_number: 31 userid: 1126 dir: disk0/00/01/30/51 datestamp: 2012-09-24 15:39:54 lastmod: 2016-11-15 14:00:36 status_changed: 2012-09-24 15:39:54 type: thesis_degree metadata_visibility: show contact_email: alanandeloge@gmail.com item_issues_count: 0 eprint_status: archive creators_name: DeLoge, Alana creators_email: and86@pitt.edu creators_id: AND86 title: Impressions of Interculturality and Health Care in Bolivia: Three Cases from Cochabamba ispublished: unpub divisions: sch_gsph_behavioralcommhealthsci full_text_status: public keywords: Bolivia, health care, interculturality abstract: Considerable health disparities exist that result in both poorer health outcomes and relatively low accessibility of health care for the world’s indigenous populations. States and global/international health organizations have prioritized indigenous health. Intercultural health care plays a pivotal role in this prioritization. Recent governmental changes in Bolivia, a country in which two thirds of the population self-identify as indigenous, have resulted in state discourse centered on decolonization and interculturality that advocates indigenous rights as well as economic and popular democracy. Research that focuses on how intercultural policies are practiced on the ground or on how individuals are experiencing these policies is lacking. Using qualitative data gathered from semi-structured interviews of three individuals living in and around Cochabamba, Bolivia, this thesis explores participants’ thoughts and experiences of interculturality, health, and the Bolivian healthcare system. Results are contextualized 1) through a discussion of the intercultural health care literature based on Latin American examples and 2) according to two health behavior theories: Social Cognitive Theory and the Structural-Ecological Model. The results presented here raise concerns about the implementation and effectiveness of intercultural healthcare policies. Participants have noticed very little change as a result of new polices and are skeptical of the motivations driving interculturality. Additional factors, such as substantial financial barriers, impede intercultural health care. Research that investigates how intercultural health care functions on the ground and in practice in Bolivia has repercussions for health policy on a global scale. The research presented here is of public health importance because, if the goal is to improve the health of indigenous peoples worldwide, a more critical consideration of the implementation of intercultural healthcare efforts, of which this thesis is part, is necessary. date: 2012-09-24 date_type: completed pages: 57 institution: University of Pittsburgh refereed: TRUE etdcommittee_type: committee_chair etdcommittee_type: committee_member etdcommittee_type: committee_member etdcommittee_name: Terry, Martha etdcommittee_name: Grubs, Robin etdcommittee_name: Keane, Christopher etdcommittee_email: materry@pitt.edu etdcommittee_email: rgrubs@pitt.edu etdcommittee_email: CRKCITY@pitt.edu etdcommittee_id: MATERRY etdcommittee_id: RGRUBS etdcommittee_id: CRKCITY etd_defense_date: 2012-08-07 etd_approval_date: 2012-09-24 etd_submission_date: 2012-07-23 etd_release_date: 2012-09-24 etd_access_restriction: immediate etd_patent_pending: FALSE assigned_doi: doi:10.5195/pitt.etd.2012.13051 thesis_type: thesis degree: MPH citation: DeLoge, Alana (2012) Impressions of Interculturality and Health Care in Bolivia: Three Cases from Cochabamba. Master's Thesis, University of Pittsburgh. (Unpublished) document_url: http://d-scholarship-dev.library.pitt.edu/13051/1/DeLoge-Thesis-Final-Sep17.pdf