Women’s participation in a disease management intervention for podoconiosis in northern Rwanda: understanding the context of women’s lives
Corinna Thellmann, Gemma Aellah, Valerienne Maltemps, Gail Davey, Dieudonne Uwizeye, Papreen Nahar

TL;DR
This study explores how women in northern Rwanda face challenges in participating in a podoconiosis disease management program due to cultural, geographic, and social factors.
Contribution
The study introduces a structural violence framework to understand gendered barriers in podoconiosis interventions.
Findings
Five contextual domains hindered women's optimal participation in the intervention.
Gender and power imbalances significantly affected women's engagement with the program.
Women experienced both benefits and challenges from the disease management intervention.
Abstract
Podoconiosis is a Neglected Tropical Disease which leads to foot and leg swelling (lymphoedema) and, ultimately, severe disability. People suffering from podoconiosis often cannot continue their economic or social roles for prolonged periods of time and experience stigmatisation. Research points towards women being more affected by podoconiosis and podoconiosis disease management interventions being less effective for women. Women’s participation in a podoconiosis disease management intervention in northern Rwanda was the focus of this study. The benefits women experienced when taking part in the intervention, and the challenges they faced when trying to follow intervention advice were explored. This study is based on a focused ethnography which applied several qualitative research methods, including in-depth and key informant interviews, focus group discussions, transect walks, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParasitic Diseases Research and Treatment · Syphilis Diagnosis and Treatment · Dermatological diseases and infestations
