A Companion to Medical Anthropology. Группа авторов

A Companion to Medical Anthropology - Группа авторов


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that focuses the process. Methods become the active connection between theory and analysis. The “who” element is the sampling process (Trotter 2012). It is the systematic process for selecting the individuals and groups that are going to tell their important cultural stories and provide the basic findings that can result in some type of problem-solving applied action. The “what” dimension is the cultural domain (area of everyday life) that people are describing. The “where and when” elements of anthropological methods are the physical and temporal contexts that surround the individuals and their actions. The anthropological “how” of applied anthropology methods is a complex mix of interviewing, observations, participation, explanation, validation, and cultural learning that allows the anthropologist to match what people say and do, when they say and do it, and where these activities occur with the theory that will explain it. And finally, the “why” dimension of ethnographic methods is the opportunity for all of the participants (researchers and researched) to explain, interpret, and clarify what is happening from each stakeholders’ point of view.

      Examples of Midrange Theory in Application

      Connections between the Internal and the External (Cognitive and Psychological Approaches)

      The research on aspects of the internal–external connections between thought and behavior has developed predominantly within psychological anthropology and cognitive anthropology, although other approaches have also played a part in this area of midrange theory development. The midrange theories that appear to be in the most common use include Cultural Models, Cultural Beliefs Systematic Comparison, and Cultural Cognition (domain analysis). Some specific examples of the use of a cultural models or cultural health beliefs models include research on building culturally congruent prevention systems which are more than models; they are actual structural programs that test the models and their gender sensitivity for use in intervention programs (Weeks et al. 1996).

      Cultural Domain Analysis provides an arena within which midrange theories have been successfully applied to both research questions and the development of HIV and drug interventions among other applied efforts. These approaches can provide excellent models for providing culturally competent, and locally motivated information prevention information, as in the case of a Puerto Rican study of what individuals wanted to know about substance abuse and AIDS education from risk reduction programs. They can also provide key information for qualitative–quantitative bridges to find predictors of risk perception, as seen in the work of Singer et al. (1996) among women drug users.


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