TY - JOUR
T1 - Found in translation
T2 - Navigating uncertainty to save a child's heart. Paediatric cardiac surgery in Cape Town, South Africa
AU - Vivian, Lauraine Margaret Helen
AU - Hunter, Cynthia
AU - Tan, Lawrence
AU - Comitis, George
AU - Neveling, Guy
AU - Lawrenson, John
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding The National Research Foundation of South Africa. Emerging Researcher Award: University of Cape Town.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 BMJ Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - This medical humanities paper describes our qualitative research into pathways to care and informed consent for 10 children who had cardiac surgery in the Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital, Cape Town, South Africa. Our multidisciplinary team consists of cardiologists, anthropologists, a social scientist and a general practitioner in two sites, South Africa and Australia. This paper builds on our first publication in a specialist cardiology journal on a 'qualitative snapshot' of these children's life stories from 2011 to 2016 but turns to the medical humanities to explore a concept of 'uncertainty'. Data analysis revealed that for the children's parents and doctors, 'uncertainty' underscored procedures. Indeed, the literature review showed that 'uncertainty' is intrinsic to heart surgery and was integral to Barnard's first heart transplant in Cape Town in 1967. We demonstrate that in meeting the challenges inherent in the 'uncertainty dimension', doctors established greater 'medical certainty'about each operation. This happened as they encountered the difficult clinical and biopsychosocial factors that were fundamental to the diagnosis of children's cardiac defects. It was doctors' translation of these decision-making processes that informed parental decisions and described why, despite feelings of uncertainty, parents signed consent. To visually describe heart surgery in this locality we asked the South African photographer, Guy Neveling to record some children undergoing echocardiograms and surgery. These photographs qualitatively demonstrate what medical certainty entails, and parents' trust in doctors and surgeons, whom they knew had 'reasonable certainty' that their child's 'heart is worth saving'.
AB - This medical humanities paper describes our qualitative research into pathways to care and informed consent for 10 children who had cardiac surgery in the Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital, Cape Town, South Africa. Our multidisciplinary team consists of cardiologists, anthropologists, a social scientist and a general practitioner in two sites, South Africa and Australia. This paper builds on our first publication in a specialist cardiology journal on a 'qualitative snapshot' of these children's life stories from 2011 to 2016 but turns to the medical humanities to explore a concept of 'uncertainty'. Data analysis revealed that for the children's parents and doctors, 'uncertainty' underscored procedures. Indeed, the literature review showed that 'uncertainty' is intrinsic to heart surgery and was integral to Barnard's first heart transplant in Cape Town in 1967. We demonstrate that in meeting the challenges inherent in the 'uncertainty dimension', doctors established greater 'medical certainty'about each operation. This happened as they encountered the difficult clinical and biopsychosocial factors that were fundamental to the diagnosis of children's cardiac defects. It was doctors' translation of these decision-making processes that informed parental decisions and described why, despite feelings of uncertainty, parents signed consent. To visually describe heart surgery in this locality we asked the South African photographer, Guy Neveling to record some children undergoing echocardiograms and surgery. These photographs qualitatively demonstrate what medical certainty entails, and parents' trust in doctors and surgeons, whom they knew had 'reasonable certainty' that their child's 'heart is worth saving'.
KW - cardiology
KW - medical anthropology
KW - medical humanities
KW - paediatrics
KW - surgery
U2 - 10.1136/medhum-2019-011650
DO - 10.1136/medhum-2019-011650
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 32467300
AN - SCOPUS:85085873131
VL - 47
SP - 112
EP - 122
JO - Medical Humanities
JF - Medical Humanities
SN - 1468-215X
IS - 1
ER -