Rapid ethnographic appraisal of community concepts of and responses to joint pain in Kilimanjaro, Tanzania.
Elizabeth Francis MsokaChristopher BunnPerry MsokaNateiya M YongoloEmma LaurieSally WykeEmma McIntoshBlandina T MmbagaPublished in: BMJ global health (2024)
Conceptualisations of and responses to joint pain in the two communities were syncretic, mixing folk and biomedical practices. Narratives about who is affected by joint pain mirror emerging epidemiological findings, suggesting a strong 'lay epidemiology' in these communities. Anthropological methods can support the decolonisation of global health by decentring the imposition of English language biomedicine and pursuing synthetic, dignified languages of care.