The Ambiguity Imperative: "Success" in a Maternal Health Program in Uganda.

Isabelle L Lange ORCID logo; Christine Kayemba Nalwadda ORCID logo; Juliet Kiguli ORCID logo; Loveday Penn-Kekana ORCID logo; (2021) The Ambiguity Imperative: "Success" in a Maternal Health Program in Uganda. Medical anthropology, 40 (5). pp. 458-472. ISSN 0145-9740 DOI: 10.1080/01459740.2021.1922901
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Global health programs are compelled to demonstrate impact on their target populations. We study an example of social franchising - a popular healthcare delivery model in low/middle-income countries - in the Ugandan private maternal health sector. The discrepancies between the program's official profile and its actual operation reveal the franchise responded to its beneficiaries, but in a way incoherent with typical evidence production on social franchises, which privileges simple narratives blurring the details of program enactment. Building on concepts of not-knowing and the production of success, we consider the implications of an imperative to maintain ambiguity in global health programming and academia.



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