Literature DB >> 17131605

Western health practitioners' view about African traditional health practitioners' treatment and care of people living with HIV/AIDS.

J V Summerton1.   

Abstract

African traditional health practitioners are an important source of health care for many South Africans. Thus, they are a health resource in this society. However, the integration of traditional health practitioners into the mainstream of health care is a complex process. Various factors contribute to this complexity, including the skepticism and reservation with which some western health practitioners view traditional health practitioners. This paper highlights the perceived strengths and weaknesses of the traditional healing system for people living with HIV/AIDS, as perceived by western health practitioners. The use of traditional practitioners as a choice of health care is attributed to both the strengths and weaknesses of this system of health care. The strength of the traditional healing system is in its sharing of the worldview and belief system of its users, it being an alternative to an inefficient western health care system (official system), privacy and absence of time limitations per consultation, treating patients psychologically, and scientifically unexplained physiological relief of the symptoms of specific illnesses. The perceived weaknesses of the traditional healing system include harmful treatment regimens, especially for people living with HIV/AIDS; prolonging the seeking of appropriate health care when traditional remedies fail to produce the desired effect; destroying interpersonal relationships of people living with HIV/AIDS through witchcraft accusations; psychological torment caused by the belief that HIV/AIDS can be cured by traditional remedies/intervention; and increasing the workload of western practitioners who are requested by patients to conduct multiple HIV tests after undergoing various traditional treatment regimens to cure HIV/AIDS. It is recommended that traditional practitioners be encouraged to adapt harmful traditional healing practices to the benefit of their patients in a non-judgemental and non-critical manner. In addition, joint workshops should be conducted with traditional and western practitioners to demystify traditional healing practices.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17131605     DOI: 10.4102/curationis.v29i3.1089

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curationis        ISSN: 0379-8577


  6 in total

1.  Traditional healers, faith healers and medical practitioners: the contribution of medical pluralism to bottlenecks along the cascade of care for HIV/AIDS in Eastern and Southern Africa.

Authors:  Mosa Moshabela; Dominic Bukenya; Gabriel Darong; Joyce Wamoyi; Estelle McLean; Morten Skovdal; William Ddaaki; Kenneth Ondeng'e; Oliver Bonnington; Janet Seeley; Victoria Hosegood; Alison Wringe
Journal:  Sex Transm Infect       Date:  2017-07       Impact factor: 3.519

2.  Decolonising the mindsets, attitudes and practices of the allopathic and indigenous health practitioners in postcolonial society: An exploratory approach in the management of patients.

Authors:  Simon M Nemutandani; Stephen J Hendricks; Mavis F Mulaudzi
Journal:  Afr J Prim Health Care Fam Med       Date:  2018-05-28

3.  Cultural factors that influence the treatment of osteosarcoma in Zulu patients: Healthcare professionals' perspectives and strategies.

Authors:  Ottilia Brown; Veonna Goliath; Dalena R M van Rooyen; Colleen Aldous; Leonard C Marais
Journal:  Health SA       Date:  2018-06-28

4.  Perceptions and experiences of allopathic health practitioners on collaboration with traditional health practitioners in post-apartheid South Africa.

Authors:  Simon M Nemutandani; Stephen J Hendricks; Mavis F Mulaudzi
Journal:  Afr J Prim Health Care Fam Med       Date:  2016-06-10

5.  Allopathic and traditional health practitioners' collaboration.

Authors:  Dalena van Rooyen; Blanche Pretorius; Nomazwi M Tembani; Wilma ten Ham
Journal:  Curationis       Date:  2015-07-23

6.  Shifting and transforming the practice of audiology: The inclusion of traditional healing.

Authors:  Dhanashree Pillay; Tshepang Serooe
Journal:  S Afr J Commun Disord       Date:  2019-11-20
  6 in total

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