Gate-keeping and women's health seeking
behaviour in Navrongo, northern Ghana.
Among the Kassena-Nankana of northern Ghana,
compound heads and husbands impede women's prompt access to modern health care.
This paper shows that such gate-keeping systems have a negative effect on child
survival. To investigate the social construction of compound-based gate-keeping
systems, the authors relied on a series of qualitative interviews conducted in
the Kassena-Nankana district These data reveal that whilst compound heads are
gate-keepers for spiritual reasons, husbands play such role for economic
reasons. But more important, this article presents health interventions that are
on trial in Navrongo (northen Ghana) and how they undermine such gate-keeping
systems.
PMID: 12816310