Literature DB >> 22380886

Traditional healers formalised?

Jp Van Niekerk1.   

Abstract

Traditional healers are the first to be called for help when illness strikes the majority of South Africans. Their communities have faith in their ability to cure or alleviate conditions managed by doctors, and much more. A visit to such practitioners' websites (they are up with the latest advertising technology!) shows that they promise help with providing more power, love, security or money, protection from evil people and spirits, enhancing one's sex life with penis enlargement and vagina tightening spells, etc. Contemplating such claims, it is easy to be dismissive of traditional healers. But in this issue of the SAMJ Nompumelelo Mbatha and colleagues1 argue that the traditional healers' regulatory council, promised by an Act of Parliament, should be established, followed by (or preferably preceded by) formal recognition by employers of sick certificates issued by traditional healers. Can matters be so simply resolved? What does this mean for doctors and other formally recognised healthcare professionals, and how to respond to such claims and social pressures?

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22380886     DOI: 10.7196/samj.5712

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  S Afr Med J


  6 in total

1.  Who cares for former child soldiers? Mental health systems of care in sierra leone.

Authors:  Suzan J Song; Helene van den Brink; Joop de Jong
Journal:  Community Ment Health J       Date:  2013-01-22

2.  Mobile "doctors" and their medical diagnosis in rural Southern Nigeria. Truth or deception? A public health case report.

Authors:  Chukwuemeka Anthony Umeh; Stella Chioma Onyi; Hycienth Peterson Ahaneku
Journal:  Pan Afr Med J       Date:  2014-02-28

3.  How beliefs in traditional healers impact on the use of allopathic medicine: In the case of indigenous snakebite in Eswatini.

Authors:  Sarah Nann
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2021-09-09

4.  Traditional health practitioners' perceptions, herbal treatment and management of HIV and related opportunistic infections.

Authors:  Denver Davids; Tarryn Blouws; Oluwaseyi Aboyade; Diana Gibson; Joop T De Jong; Charlotte Van't Klooster; Gail Hughes
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2014-12-05       Impact factor: 2.733

5.  "It is better to die": experiences of traditional health practitioners within the HIV treatment as prevention trial communities in rural South Africa (ANRS 12249 TasP trial).

Authors:  Mosa Moshabela; Thembelihle Zuma; Joanna Orne-Gliemann; Collins Iwuji; Joseph Larmarange; Nuala McGrath
Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2016

6.  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
  6 in total

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