Patients treated by physicians and folk healers: A comparative outcome study in Taiwan
โ Scribed by Arthur Kleinman; James L. Gale
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1982
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 876 KB
- Volume
- 6
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0165-005X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Outcome of 118 patients treated by shamans in Taipei, Taiwan, is compared with that of 112 roughly matched patients treated by physicians. Impressive among the chief findings at time of follow-up evaluation, more than three-fourths of patients in both groups across five distinctive sickness types perceived their health problems as improved and were so evaluated by the research staff. Patient attributions of source of threapeutic efficacy were more complex and ambivalent. Counter to our hypothesis a higher proportion of patients were dissatisfied with shamanistic treatment than with biomedical care, and this held true even for somatization patients with psychiatric problems. The findings are interpreted with respect to serious limitati~ons on research design and methods that pertain to this and, we believe, any other study of indigenous healing. These limitations call into question certain of the findings in particular, and illustrate why assessments of therapeutic outcome, besides reflecting biological constraints, should be recognized as differential cultural construals of socially constructed reality.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Reperfusion injury in skeletal muscle: a prospective study in patients w i t h acute limb ischaemia and claudicants treated by revascularization A study was carried out to document the occurrence of rhabdomyolysis and renal complications in patients undergoing vascular reconstruction. Indices o
Treatment response remains suboptimal for many patients with chronic hepatitis C, particularly those with genotype 1 and high levels of viremia. The efficacy of high-dose regimens of peginterferon alfa-2a and ribavirin was compared with conventional dose regimens in patients with features predicting