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Revista Ciencias de la Salud

Print version ISSN 1692-7273On-line version ISSN 2145-4507

Abstract

VARELA LONDONO PHD, Luz Estella; GIRALDO MORA PHD, Clara Victoria; LEON GANAN PHD, Jaime  and  ARIAS VALENCIA PHD, María Mercedes. Huntington's Disease: A Difficult Relationship between Patients and the Right to Health in Colombia. Rev. Cienc. Salud [online]. 2021, vol.19, n.2, pp.20-38.  Epub Nov 01, 2021. ISSN 1692-7273.  https://doi.org/10.12804/revistas.urosario.edu.co/revsalud/a.10288.

Introduction:

The right to health is enshrined in the Political Constitution of Colombia as well as in the Statutory Health Legislation 1751 of 2015. Patients with Huntington's disease require specialized and interdisciplinary care because of the complex genetic neurodegenerative nature of the disorder, which usually affects the middle-aged individuals and is incurable.

Materials and methods:

This qualitative study was conducted in different regions, followed by data collection through interviews during family visits, participant observation, and documentary review. The results are a part of the analysis, which was conducted according to the grounded theory postulates with an origin in sociology.

Results:

A difficult relationship was noticed between the individuals and health system, indicating that those seeking care encounter multiple barriers and then attempt to overcome them through tutelage and live in principal or intermediate cities with favorable care availabilities. Others living in remote regions, such as Chocó and Juan de Acosta on the Atlantic, undertake only a few actions as a sort of "learned helplessness," better summarized by Seligman as "doing nothing because nothing will work."

Conclusion:

The results of the present study indicate that Huntington's disease in the genuine state receives no care and that the conditions of these patients are precarious to the states of malnutrition and abandonment. The majority of these patients have no access to formal employment; thus, they see no possibility for disability pension or retirement, while others debate about the process of achieving it and suffering from poverty and precariousness.

Keywords : Social security; pensions; right to health; Huntington disease; rare diseases.

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