What do sequential behavioral patterns suggest about the medical decision-making process?: modeling home case management of acute illnesses in a rural Cameroonian village.

It is well recognized that much of the world's medical care is in the hands of laypeople. In pluralistic medical settings, laypeople choose what to do first, second, third, and fourth from a variety of treatment options. In retrospect, laypeople's choices can be represented as an ordered series of health-related behaviors. A systematic of such sequential data provides insights into caregivers' patterns of resort and suggests a tentative theory for how laypeople make medical choices. This study examines sequences of health-related behaviors from a small, Kom-speaking village in Cameroon. Local residents consider seven health actions, including: delaying initial treatment, using various home remedies or pharmaceuticals, going to a government clinic or a Catholic hospital, and consulting a private nurse or a traditional healer. Researchers visited 88 randomly selected compounds on a weekly basis over a 5-month period. Data were collected on the treatments associated with 429 nonchronic episodes. Analysis of the treatment sequences suggests that residents customarily use delay of treatments as a tactic in the decision-making process. Caregivers were more likely to use home-based treatments and to use them earlier in the treatment sequences than they were to seek treatment from outside the compound. When seeking assistance, caregivers often used traditional healers as a conduit to other outside options. Laypeople used a limited number of unique treatment sequences and avoided the repetition of treatment modalities. Caregivers act as if they were following three basic tenets. They minimize uncertainty by identifying illness types that require particular health actions and by delaying action. They minimize the cost of care by first resorting to treatments that are less expensive and easier to administer or by reducing the number of treatments tried. And laypeople maximize treatment variety in the hopes of finding at least one treatment that helps stop the illness.

[1]  R. Ball,et al.  Can we learn from medicine hucksters? , 1975, The Journal of communication.

[2]  J. Lasker,et al.  Choosing among therapies: illness behavior in the Ivory Coast. , 1981, Social science & medicine. Medical psychology & medical sociology.

[3]  Bernice A. Pescosolido,et al.  Beyond Rational Choice: The Social Dynamics of How People Seek Help , 1992, American Journal of Sociology.

[4]  J. Young,et al.  a model of illness treatment decisions in a Tarascan town , 1980 .

[5]  K. DeWalt STUDENT PRIZE PAPER: The Illnesses No Longer Understand: Changing Concepts of Health and Curing in a Rural Mexican Community , 1977 .

[6]  I. K. Zola,et al.  ON GOING TO SEE THE DOCTOR, THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF THE PATIENT TO THE DECISION TO SEEK MEDICAL AID. A SELECTIVE REVIEW. , 1963, Journal of chronic diseases.

[7]  W. Miller,et al.  Health, Culture and Community: Case Studies of Public Reactions to Health Programs. , 1956 .

[8]  J. Young Medical choice in a Mexican village , 1982 .

[9]  L. Pachter,et al.  Clinical implications of a folk illness: empacho in mainland Puerto Ricans. , 1992, Medical anthropology.

[10]  P. Kaberry,et al.  West African Kingdoms in the Nineteenth Century , 1967 .

[11]  G. Mwabu Health care decisions at the household level: results of a rural health survey in Kenya. , 1986, Social science & medicine.

[12]  Eliot Freidson,et al.  Client Control and Medical Practice , 1960, American Journal of Sociology.

[13]  Poverty and health : a sociological analysis , 1970 .

[14]  J B McKinlay,et al.  Some approaches and problems in the study of the use of services--an overview. , 1972, Journal of health and social behavior.

[15]  S. Katz,et al.  The interface of dual systems of health care in the developing world: toward health policy initiatives in Africa. , 1979, Social science & medicine.

[16]  A. Kroeger,et al.  Anthropological and socio-medical health care research in developing countries. , 1983, Social science & medicine.

[17]  Carole E. Hill,et al.  Applying Cognitive Decision Theory to the Study of Regional Patterns of Illness Treatment Choice , 1990 .

[18]  Gery W. Ryan,et al.  Can we predict what mothers do ? Modeling childhood diarrhea in rural Mexico , 1996 .

[19]  J. Connell,et al.  Diagnosis and cure: the resort to traditional and modern medical practitioners in the North Solomons, Papua New Guinea. , 1981, Social science & medicine. Part B, Medical anthropology.

[20]  A. Young Some Implications of Medical Beliefs and Practices for Social Anthropology , 1976 .

[21]  R E Klein,et al.  Predicting treatment-seeking behavior in Guatemala: a comparison of the health services research and decision-theoretic approaches. , 1997, Medical anthropology quarterly.

[22]  A. Cartwright Some problems in the collection and analysis of morbidity data obtained from sample surveys. , 1959, The Milbank Memorial Fund quarterly.

[23]  H. Fabrega,,et al.  Toward a Model of Illness Behavior , 1973, Medical care.

[24]  S. Timmermans,et al.  Handbook of medical sociology. , 1972 .

[25]  Arthur Kleinman,et al.  Patients and Healers in the Context of Culture , 2023 .

[26]  I. Press,et al.  Problems in the definition and classification of medical systems. , 1980, Social science & medicine. Medical anthropology.

[27]  C. Erasmus,et al.  Changing Folk Beliefs and the Relativity of Empirical Knowledge , 1952, Southwestern Journal of Anthropology.

[28]  S. Cosminsky,et al.  Medical pluralism on a Guatemalan plantation. , 1980, Social science & medicine. Medical anthropology.

[29]  Medical decision making among the Kom of Cameroon : modeling how characteristics of illnesses, patients, caretakers, and compounds affect treatment choice in a rural community , 1996 .

[30]  I. Deutscher,et al.  What we say/what we do : sentiments & acts , 1974 .

[31]  R. Pool Dialogue and the Interpretation of Illness: Conversations in a Cameroon Village , 1994 .

[32]  E. L. Koos The health of Regionville : what the people thought and did about it , 1954 .

[33]  B. Janowitz,et al.  Management and treatment of diarrhea in Honduran children: factors associated with mothers' health care behaviors. , 1992, Social science & medicine.

[34]  David W. Conrath,et al.  Organizational Decision Making Behavior Under Varying Conditions of Uncertainty , 1967 .

[35]  J. W. Hutchinson Discrete Attribute Models of Brand Switching , 1986 .

[36]  K. Tardiff,et al.  Ethnicity and patterns of help-seeking , 1978, Culture, medicine and psychiatry.

[37]  A. C. Colson The differential use of medical resources in developing countries. , 1971, Journal of health and social behavior.

[38]  Vaughan Jp,et al.  Health interview surveys in developing countries: a methodological review. , 1986 .

[39]  B. Stoner FORMAL MODELING OF HEALTH CARE DECISIONS: SOME APPLICATIONS AND LIMITATIONS , 1985 .

[40]  C. Browner Margaret Clark's Enduring Contribution to Latino Studies in Medical Anthropology , 1994 .

[41]  Howard Raiffa,et al.  Games And Decisions , 1958 .

[42]  P. Nkwi,et al.  Elements for a history of the Western Grassfields , 1982 .

[43]  R. Abelson Decision making and decision theory , 1985 .

[44]  I. Press Urban illness: physicians, curers and dual use in Bogota. , 1969, Journal of health and social behavior.

[45]  John M. Janzen,et al.  The Quest For Therapy In Lower Zaire , 1978 .

[46]  G. Foster,et al.  Medical anthropology and international health planning. , 1977, Social science & medicine.

[47]  L. Nader,et al.  Cultural Illness and Health: Essays in Human Adaptation , 1973 .

[48]  S. Fiske,et al.  The Handbook of Social Psychology , 1935 .

[49]  K. Oths Health Care Decisions of Households in Economic Crisis: An Example from the Peruvian Highlands , 1994 .

[50]  E. A. Burtt,et al.  Illness and Cure , 1968 .

[51]  Charles M. Good,et al.  Ethnomedical Systems in Africa: Patterns of Traditional Medicine in Rural and Urban Kenya , 1987 .

[52]  H. Heggenhougen Bomohs, doctors and sinsehs--medical pluralism in Malaysia. , 1980, Social science & medicine. Medical anthropology.

[53]  P. Killworth,et al.  The Problem of Informant Accuracy: The Validity of Retrospective Data , 1984 .

[54]  A. Kroeger,et al.  Health interview surveys in developing countries: a review of the methods and results. , 1983, International journal of epidemiology.