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Did we do good? NGOs, conflicts of interest and the evaluation of short-term medical missions in Solola, Guatemala

机译:我们做得好吗?危地马拉索洛拉的非政府组织,利益冲突和短期医疗任务评估

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This article focuses on current trends in scholarly literature concerning the evaluation of short-term medical missions. The paucity of information on short-term medical missions in general has contributed to the lack of sufficient frameworks for evaluating them. While examples in the scholarly literature are sparse, in those rare cases where missions are evaluated, they tend to (1) produce their own criteria for evaluation, and (2) evaluate themselves based on metrics that emphasize their perceptions of accomplishments. 1 draw on interviews (n = 31) as well as participant-observation regarding medical missions, to critique these trends. The data analyzed derive from an on-going ethnographic study began in Solola, Guatemala in 1999, which since 2011 has been directly focused on short-term medical missions. More specifically, my data suggest potential conflict of interest inherent to both volunteering and hosting a short-term medical mission. NGO hosts, who maintain long-term residence in Solola, may differ from short-term volunteers in both how they understand volunteer obligations as well what they consider helpful volunteer activity. These same organizations may remain financially tied to volunteer labour, limiting their own perceptions of what missions can or should do. I argue that these conflicts of interest have created an evaluation environment where critical questions are not asked. Unless these hard questions are addressed, short-term medical mission providers cannot be certain that their own activities are consonant with the moral imperatives that purportedly drive this particular humanitarian effort. This study demonstrates how ethnographic methods can be instrumental in attempts to evaluate humanitarian endeavours.
机译:本文重点介绍有关短期医疗任务评估的学术文献中的当前趋势。总体而言,短期医疗任务的信息匮乏,导致缺乏评估任务的足够框架。虽然学术文献中的例子很少,但在评估任务的罕见情况下,他们倾向于(1)制定自己的评估标准,并且(2)根据强调成就感的指标进行自我评估。 1利用访谈(n = 31)以及参与者对医疗任务的观察来批评这些趋势。分析的数据来自于1999年在危地马拉索洛拉进行的一项人种学研究,该研究自2011年以来直接专注于短期医疗任务。更具体地说,我的数据表明,志愿服务和短期医疗任务固有的潜在利益冲突。在索洛拉(Solola)长期居住的非政府组织东道主与短期志愿者在理解志愿者义务以及他们认为有益的志愿者活动方面可能有所不同。这些相同的组织可能仍然在经济上与志愿服务有关,从而限制了他们自己对任务可以或应该做什么的看法。我认为,这些利益冲突创造了一个不提出关键问题的评估环境。除非解决这些棘手的问题,否则短期医疗任务提供者无法确定他们自己的活动是否与道德驱动因素相符,而道德驱动因素据称会推动这一特殊的人道主义努力。这项研究表明,人种学方法如何有助于评估人道主义努力。

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