Self-care and the informal sale of drugs in south Cameroon
Sjaak Van der Geest
Social Science & Medicine 1987
Abstract
Self-care, though the most common of all forms of therapeutic action, has been little studied. This paper describes the context of self-medication with western pharmaceuticals in an area of South Cameroon (in 1980). The identity and appropriateness of these pharmaceuticals are briefly discussed. The paradoxical character of self-medication is emphasised: improvement in the quality of self-medication implies both growth and loss of self reliance, increase and decrease of medicalisation. People in Cameroon, or indeed anywhere in the Third World, find themselves in a ‘double-bind’.
Categories: Pharmaceuticals and Markets
Share
Commentary
The latest commentary on the use of antimicrobials in society.
Submissions to the AMIS Hub
Are you a social scientist who is working in antimicrobial resistance (AMR)?
Markets and Pharmaceuticals: Hardship, Antibiotics, and Markets for...
Northern Thailand (Chiang Rai), 19 March 2018, 7am: The steep mountain road winds through rice fields, small streams, and coffee...
Anti-biosis? – Social and Cultural Inquiries into Human-Microbe...
Two of us from the AMIS Programme Team (Clare Chandler and Komatra Chuengsatiansup) are acting as associate editors for Palgrave...