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This paper identifies the curative and preventive roles of Catholic missionaries in the development
of health services in Kihanja and Ihangiro chiefdoms in Tanzania from 1904 to 1961. The study is based on
historical design and qualitative approach. The documentary, in-depth interviews and observation methods
were employed in data collection. In disagreeing to traditional scholars, the paper advocates that missionaries
did not only offer curative health services but also provided a variety of preventive services mainly in rural
areas where up to the 1930s government hospitals and dispensaries were either very few or non-existent. The
curative services provided by Catholic missionaries consisted of surgical and non-surgical treatments as well
as nursing care activities. The preventive roles included Maternal and Child Health (MCH), health education,
training of midwives, vaccination, and leprosy and tuberculosis services. The paper emphasizes that missionary
health services not only complemented government’s services in the colony but also pioneered medical
provision in the rural areas where the colonial state lacked resource to invest. Missions’ efforts to collaborate
with the government was not made to perpetuate colonialism but rather to facilitate the availability of more
health services. |
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