MISQ Archivist
Telemedicine in the Upper
Amazon: Interplay with Local Health Care Practices
Gianluca Miscione
Abstract
This article is based on introduction of a telemedicine system in
the jungles of northeastern Peru. The system was designed by a
European consortium led by a Spanish polytechnic in cooperation with
two universities in Lima and the Peruvian Ministry of Health. The
purpose of the system was to improve health conditions by extending
science-based medicine into a region with well-established
traditional healing practices. The central analytical focus of this
article is on the interplay between the public health care system,
which used the telemedicine system, and local health care practices.
The manner in which scientific medicine was delivered through
information technology and public health care services is analyzed
in terms of the health personnel’s activity, the local population’s
conceptions of health, and the trajectories followed by patients
seeking recovery. The author participated in the design of the
second evaluation of the telemedicine system and acted as a
participant observer in the regional hospital and peripheral
clinics. In addition to interviewing health care staff from the
study area, the author also met with traditional healers and
patients in the districts whether or not they were involved in the
telemedicine project. New institutional theory provided the
analytical framework for the interpretation of the observed behavior
of the public health care staff, traditional healers, and potential
patients. Empirically, this study describes the informal aspects of
the functioning of the telemedicine system, and its partial mismatch
with the definitions of health and illness employed by local
communities and healers.
An argument is made that people’s construction of their health,
which is embedded in their normal patterns of action, should be
identified, and then considered in the design, implementation, and
evaluation of future telemedicine projects. This article
problematizes an approach to telemedicine-based health development
that is weakly accountable to local social contexts and their
diversity.