Literature DB >> 6666110

The changing Alaskan experience. Health care services and cultural identity.

M Dixon, W W Myers, P A Book, P O Nice.   

Abstract

Before Western contact, Alaskan Native populations were self-sufficient in their health practices. Slowly, the Native health care system was replaced by a Western one which was highly effective in treating infectious diseases. As infectious diseases were brought under control by the Indian Health Service, the emergent leading health problems were related to violence, attributed in part to cultural disintegration. New types of Native health providers and new Native-controlled institutions evolved to provide culturally appropriate health and mental health services and to promote a stronger cultural identity.

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6666110      PMCID: PMC1011025     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  West J Med        ISSN: 0093-0415


  6 in total

1.  Alaska's great sickness, 1900: an epidemic of measles and influenza in a virgin soil population.

Authors:  R J Wolfe
Journal:  Proc Am Philos Soc       Date:  1982-04-08

2.  Portrait of an Eskimo tribal health doctor.

Authors:  S Juul
Journal:  Alaska Med       Date:  1979-11

3.  Andrew Skin Sr.: Eskimo Doctor.

Authors:  S Kirchner
Journal:  Alaska Med       Date:  1982 Nov-Dec

4.  Native medicine in southeast Alaska. Tsimshian, Tlingit, Haida.

Authors:  M McGregor
Journal:  Alaska Med       Date:  1981 Nov-Dec

5.  The bureaucratization of the Alaska native health movement.

Authors:  D Bantz
Journal:  Alaska Med       Date:  1978-11

6.  Potential development of native health care in Cook Inlet Region.

Authors:  D Slaby
Journal:  Alaska Med       Date:  1978-11
  6 in total

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