(Dis)connectivities in wartime: The therapeutic geographies of Iraqi healthcare–seeking in Lebanon

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Abstract

The proliferation of conflicts across borders of Middle Eastern States has transformed the landscapes of health and healthcare across the region. In the case of Iraq, state healthcare has collapsed under the strain of protracted conflicts. Meanwhile, Lebanon’s post-war healthcare system is booming, and becoming more privatised. In this paper, we build on an ethnographic study on the movements and experiences of Iraqi patients in Lebanon to show how one of the consequences of war is the rise of alternative forms of healthcare–seeking practices and survival strategies–a therapeutic geography that is embedded in regional economies and geopolitical relations and reconfigurations. We argue for the need to reimagine the disconnectivity and connectivity of healthcare systems under war and conflict as grounded in the empirical realities and experiences of mobility in the Middle East. © 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

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Connectivity, Iraq, Mobility, Therapeutic geography, War, Delivery of health care, Geography, medical, Humans, Lebanon, Patient acceptance of health care, Warfare, Article, Economic aspect, Ethnographic research, Geography, Health care need, Health care system, Human, Iraqi, Politics, Priority journal, Survival, Health care delivery, Medical geography, Organization and management, Patient attitude

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