诊断和治疗:巴布亚新几内亚北所罗门群岛的传统和现代医疗从业者

Michael P. Hamnett, John Connell
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引用次数: 27

摘要

分析了布干维尔岛上两个美拉尼西亚社会的医学信仰和做法。巫术和超自然的制裁仍然很重要,因为它们是疾病的原因,因此在没有上级政治权威的情况下,它们是社会控制的形式。症状和疾病之间的区别往往是模糊的,在整个美拉尼西亚,这为分类、诊断和治疗提供了一定的灵活性。在本文所描述的这两类疾病中,大多数疾病要么被描述为“无因之病”,这种病很少严重,也从不归因于巫术或神灵的行为,要么被描述为“定居疾病”,这更严重。一些对现代医学有反应的严重疾病现在可能被归类为“无因病”。“定居点的疾病”可能是由巫术或灵魂引起的,这可能是由于违反了社会规范。巫术的影响越来越大,特别是在泗水,它更牢固地融入了更广泛的社会和经济。有各种各样的具有身体和精神技能的传统医生,“传统”治疗方法不断变化。自从战争以来。欧洲的医学和从业者已经补充了传统的从业者,特别是在Siwai,产生了双重层次的替代方案。这一现代体系只对当地人对疾病的看法产生了轻微影响。由于现代医疗实践被两个群体视为治疗症状的手段,这两个系统使应对措施具有灵活性和多样性,鼓励互补性而不是竞争性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Diagnosis and cure: The resort to traditional and modern medical practitioners in the North Solomons, Papua New Guinea

Analysis is made of medical beliefs and practices in two Melanesian societies, both on Bougainville island. Sorcery and supernatural sanctions remain important as causes of illness and hence forms of social control in the absence of superordinate political authority. Distinctions between symptoms and illness are often ambiguous and throughout Melanesia this provides some flexibility in classification, diagnosis and cure. Among both groups described in this paper, most illnesses are described as either ‘illness without cause’, which is rarely serious and never attributed to sorcery or the actions of spirits, or ‘illness of the settlement’ which is more serious. Some serious illnesses which respond to modern medicine may now be classified as ‘illness without cause’. ‘Illness of the settlement’ may be caused by sorcery or spirits, which may follow breaches of social norms. Attributions to sorcery are of growing significance, especially in Siwai which is more firmly incorporated into a wider society and economy. There are a variety of traditional medical practitioners with both physical and spiritual skills and ‘traditional’ cures are constantly changing. Since the war. European medicine and practitioners have supplemented traditional practitioners to produce, especially in Siwai, a dual hierarchy of alternatives. This modern system has only slightly affected local beliefs about illness. Because modern medical practices are viewed by both groups as means for treating symptoms, the two systems enable a flexibility and diverisity of response, encouraging complementarity rather than competitiveness.

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