Ebola and the narrative of mistrust

Worker wearing yellow protective suit holding warning tape

Summary box

  • Transmission of Ebola virus in West Africa and the Democratic Republic ofthe Congo has been traced to local people’s belief in misinformation and low trust in institutions.

  • But such analyses—and others—of Ebola transmission employ bourgeois empiricist methodologies and draw from a mental map whose contours are shaped by coloniality.

  • By tracing human rights failings to the impoverished discursive infrastructure of objectivist epidemiology, we can transform global health by transforming its representations.

They who have put out the people’s eyes, reproach them of their blindness

–John Milton, Apology for Smectymnuus (1642)

Introduction

In March 2019, The Lancet Infectious Diseases published data from a population-based survey conducted by Vinck and colleagues in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). The study suggests that the inhabitants of eastern DRC actively avoided medical care and Ebola vaccination because they did not believe Ebola virus was real.1 International media outlets soon reported the findings and reinforced a narrative that people suffering from Ebola virus disease (EVD) may blame their own false beliefs for the outbreak’s spread. In the following months, we observed how this narrative of mistrust circulated among members of the media, the academy, health ministries and frontline response teams, reinforcing a particular paradigm of causality in the spread of Ebola that obscured the structural determinants of health.

There are many reasons that conclusions like those presented in The Lancet Infectious Diseases come to be widely reported and referenced. Analyses that attempt to isolate phenomena like ‘trust’ and ‘belief’ as measurable facts simplify complex social, political and epidemiological dynamics into fungible units that are easy to comprehend. In attributing disease transmission to things like ‘culture’, ‘misinformation’ and ‘conspiracy theories’—as if these are spontaneously arising social forces that lead people in faraway places to act in unexpected ways—these studies offer a form of discussion that is easily engaged and circulated. However, by analytically omitting the historical and political determinants of the Congo’s contemporary political situation—the very factors responsible for the ‘levels’ of trust in a violent, impoverished postcolonial context—these studies neglect a different set of empirical questions about the ‘geographically broad and historically deep’2 power relations that have contributed to the Ebola outbreak.3 In so doing, such studies inadvertently relegate consideration of the historical antecedents of Congolese ‘lack of trust’ to outside the domain of ‘valid’ public health research, consideration and action.

A detailed analysis of how these historical forces become embodied as viral disease is beyond the scope of this study (and we have conducted such analyses elsewhere).4–7 Rather, in this article, we argue that epidemiological studies that claim to capture the social dynamics of disease transmission in health-seeking behaviours all too readily serve as a smokescreen that enables and perpetuates ongoing structural inequities—notably, by omitting consideration of global power relations, colonial history and contemporary extractive political economies.

Our perspective is shaped by extensive experience conducting anthropological research in West Africa and the DRC, as well as clinical work during the Ebola outbreaks in both places. First, we will offer an alternative way of reading the issue of ‘mistrust’. Next, by examining another major study on the dynamics of Ebola transmission in Sierra Leone, we will consider how predominant forms of epidemiological research effectively cause awareness of relevant historical—and continued economic—predation to disappear. Finally, we will offer some suggestions for what we call ‘epistemic reconstitution’ in the field of epidemiology. Ultimately, our stance is that neglecting histories of power relations and extraction in the study of global health crises is not merely an act of passive, neutral omission; such neglect constitutes an active reinscription—and therefore legitimation—of global health inequities along colonial lines.

References
  1. VinckP,PhamPN,BinduKKet al Institutional trust and misinformation in the response to the 2018-19 Ebola outbreak in North Kivu, DR Congo: a population-based survey. Lancet Infect Dis2019;19:529–36.doi:10.1016/S1473-3099(19)30063-5 CrossRefPubMedGoogle Scholar
  2. Farmer PE.A . Accusation: Haiti and the geography of blame. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992.Google Scholar
  3. Goguen, BoltenC . Ebola through a glass, darkly: ways of knowing the state and each other. Anthropol Q2017;90:423–49.doi:10.1353/anq.2017.0025Google Scholar
  4. RichardsonET, BarrieMB,KellyJDet al . Biosocial approaches to the 2013-16 Ebola pandemic. Health and Human Rights2016;18:167–79.Google Scholar
  5. RichardsonET, KellyJD, SesayOet al. The symbolic violence of ‘outbreak’: A mixed-methods, quasi-experimental impact evaluation of social protection on Ebola survivor wellbeing. Soc Sci Med2017;195:77–82.doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.11.018Google Scholar
  6. FrankfurterR, Kardas-NelsonM, BentonAet al . Indirect rule redux: the political economy of diamond mining and its relation to the Ebola outbreak in Kono district, Sierra Leone. Rev Afr Polit Econ2018;45:522–40.doi:10.1080/03056244.2018.1547188 Google Scholar
  7. RichardsonET, MorrowCD, HoTet al . Forced removals embodied as tuberculosis. Soc Sci Med2016;161:13–18.doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.05.015Google Scholar
  8. Richardson ET . On the coloniality of global public health. MAT2019;6:101–18.doi:10.17157/mat.6.4.761Google Scholar
  9. MillsCW . White Ignorance. In: SullivanS, TuanaN, eds. Race and Epistemologies of ignorance. Albany: State Universities of New York Press, 2007: 11–38.Google Scholar
  10. BourdieuP, WacquantLJD . An invitation to reflexive sociology. Chicago: University Of Chicago Press, 1992.Google Scholar
  11. KiehGK . The political economy of the Ebola epidemic in Liberia. In: AbdullahI, RashidI, eds. Understanding West Africa’s Ebola Epidemic: Towards a Political Economy. London: Zed Books, 2017: 85–111.Google Scholar
  12. NunnN, WantchekonL . The Slave trade and the origins of Mistrust in Africa. American Economic Review2011;101:3221–52.doi:10.1257/aer.101.7.3221 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
  13. Nzongola-NtalajaG. The Congo from Leopold to Kabila: A People’s History. London: Zed Books, 2013.Google Scholar
  14. Wikipedia. Maafa [Internet], 2018. Available: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maafa [Accessed cited 2018 Nov 12].Google Scholar
  15. PohlhausG . Relational Knowing and Epistemic Injustice: Toward a Theory of Willful Hermeneutical Ignorance. Hypatia2012;27:715–35.doi:10.1111/j.1527-2001.2011.01222.x CrossRefGoogle Scholar
  16. RortyR . Solidarity or Objectivity?In: KrauszM, ed. Relativism: interpretation and confrontation. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1989: 167–83. Google Scholar
  17. FarmerPE . From Haiti to Rwanda: AIDS and Accusations. In: SaussyH, ed. Partner to the poor: a Paul farmer reader. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2010. Google Scholar
  18. WHO Ebola Response Team. After Ebola in West Africa — unpredictable risks, preventable epidemics. New England Journal of Medicine2016;375:587–96.doi:10.1056/NEJMsr1513109CrossRefPubMedGoogle Scholar
  19. AniM. Let the circle be Unbroken: the implications of African spirituality in the diaspora. Trenton: Red Sea Press, 1994. Google Scholar
  20. MaxmenA. Exclusive: behind the front lines of the Ebola wars. Nature2019;573:178–83.doi:10.1038/d41586-019-02673-7Google Scholar
  21. RichardsonET, BarrieMB, NuttCTet al. The Ebola suspect's dilemma. Lancet Glob Health2017;5:e254–6.doi:10.1016/S2214-109X(17)30041-4Google Scholar
  22. HickelJ . Neoliberal plague: the political economy of HIV transmission in Swaziland. J South Afr Stud2012;38:513–29.doi:10.1080/03057070.2012.699700CrossRefGoogle Scholar
  23. QuijanoA. Coloniality of power, Eurocentrism, and Latin America. Nepantla: Views from South2000;1:533–80.Google Scholar
  24. MignoloWD. Introduction: coloniality of power and de-colonial thinking. Cultural Studies2007;21:155–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
  25. Ndlovu-GatsheniSJ . Coloniality of power in Postcolonial Africa. Dakar: CODESRIA, 2013.Google Scholar
  26. BoltanskiL. On critique: a sociology of Emancipation. Cambridge: Polity, 2011.Google Scholar
  27. CsordasTJ. Embodiment as a paradigm for anthropology. Ethos1990;18:5–47.doi:10.1525/eth.1990.18.1.02a00010CrossRefWeb of ScienceGoogle Scholar
  28. KeshavjeeS. Blind spot: how Neoliberalism infiltrated global health. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2014.Google Scholar
  29. LowesSR, MonteroE. The legacy of colonial medicine campaigns in central Africa2018.Google Scholar
  30. AlsanM, WanamakerM. Tuskegee and the health of black Men*. Q J Econ2018;133:407–55.doi:10.1093/qje/qjx029CrossRefPubMedGoogle Scholar
  31. GiridharadasA. Winners take all: the elite charade of changing the world. New York: Knopf, 2018.Google Scholar
  32. McMichaelAJ. Prisoners of the proximate: loosening the constraints on epidemiology in an age of change. Am J Epidemiol1999;149:887–97.doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a009732 CrossRefPubMedWeb of ScienceGoogle Scholar
  33. InhornMC, BrownPJ. The anthropology of infectious disease: international health perspectives. London: Routledge, 1997.Google Scholar
  34. MayerJD. The political ecology of disease as one new focus for medical geography. Prog Hum Geogr1996;20:441–56.doi:10.1177/030913259602000401 CrossRefWeb of ScienceGoogle Scholar

Soyez le premier à commenter

Poster un Commentaire

Votre adresse de messagerie ne sera pas publiée.


*