Literature DB >> 3629291

An interpretive solution to the problem of humoral medicine in Latin America.

B Tedlock.   

Abstract

The hot-cold categorization of humoral medicine has been referred to as the 'basic cognitive principle' of traditional medicine (TM) in Latin America, and it has been suggested that this 'dichotomy,' 'pathology,' or 'syndrome' could interfere with the delivery of western health care. Such reification and medicalization of humoral ideology and practice is the result of field methodology. By designing eliciting-frames with but two terms along the hot-cold continuum, investigators have produced lists of hot or cold foods, medicines, and illnesses. Behind the use of these reductive techniques is a belief that individuals in a culture--regardless of life experience or special training--share underlying 'emic' or 'native' taxonomies. This premise blinds researchers to differences between the medical epistemologies of lay persons and curers. Inconsistent categorizations from community to community, consultant to consultant, and even from day to day with the same consultant result from the reduction of a continuum to a dichotomy which native consultants then consciously use in a keying-out process. But 'native etic' categorizations are unproductive in constructing 'native emic' taxonomies. These difficulties can be avoided by considering medicine as a local cultural system of symbolic meanings anchored in institutions and interpersonal interactions, and by separating the medical beliefs and activities of laypersons from those of curers. The author, who combines depth interviewing in highland Guatemala, elicitation of curing texts, participation in medical contexts, and formal training in healing, demonstrates that healers do not include hot-cold categories in their explanatory models of illness etiology, and that their treatments are based on empirical knowledge of herbs rather than on humoral reasoning. The use of such reasoning, ranged along an eight-term hot-cold continuum, takes place when individuals engaged in self-treatment are uncertain concerning proper diagnosis or treatment, or when anthropologists ask questions couched in humoral terms.

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Year:  1987        PMID: 3629291     DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(87)90022-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  8 in total

1.  Marketplace conversations in Cameroon: how and why popular medical knowledge comes into being.

Authors:  S Van der Geest
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  1991-03

2.  Prenatal and delivery care and childhood immunization in Guatemala: do family and community matter?

Authors:  A R Pebley; N Goldman; G Rodríguez
Journal:  Demography       Date:  1996-05

3.  Illness and morality in the Mombasa Swahili community: a metaphorical model in an Islamic culture.

Authors:  M J Swartz
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  1997-03

Review 4.  Principle of Hot and Cold and Its Clinical Application in Latin American and Caribbean Medicines.

Authors:  Carlos A Vásquez-Londoño; Luisa F Cubillos-Cuadrado; Andrea C Forero-Ozer; Paola A Escobar-Espinosa; David O Cubillos-López; Daniel F Castaño-Betancur
Journal:  Adv Exp Med Biol       Date:  2021       Impact factor: 2.622

Review 5.  The naturalness of the artificial and our concepts of health, disease and medicine.

Authors:  Y M Barilan; M Weintraub
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2001

6.  An ethnographic study of salt use and humoral concepts in a Latino farm worker community in California's Central Valley.

Authors:  Judith C Barker; Claudia Guerra; M Judy Gonzalez-Vargas; Kristin S Hoeft
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2017-02-08       Impact factor: 2.733

7.  Maya Healers' Conception of Cancer as Revealed by Comparison With Western Medicine.

Authors:  Mónica Berger-González; Eduardo Gharzouzi; Christoph Renner
Journal:  J Glob Oncol       Date:  2016-01-27

Review 8.  Extraoral Taste Receptor Discovery: New Light on Ayurvedic Pharmacology.

Authors:  Marilena Gilca; Dorin Dragos
Journal:  Evid Based Complement Alternat Med       Date:  2017-05-31       Impact factor: 2.629

  8 in total

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