new direction.
The Practitioner's Personal Qualities
There is a consensus among healers, psychotherapists, and medical doctors that some practitioners have personality characteristics that are therapeutic, whereas
others do not. Not only are the actual personal qualities of the practitioners important, but those projected onto them by the client are crucial. This process of
projection
often is termed transference by psychotherapists and can be a salient factor in a treatment's success.
Carl Rogers observed that, although a practitioner's intellectual training and acquiring of information have many valuable effects, it is not necessarily associated with
the practitioner's success in producing positive outcomes. In his studies of psychotherapy, Rogers (
7
) found that a therapist's accurate empathy, nonpossessive
warmth, and personal genuineness were the factors that most closely related to a client's behavior change. Personal qualities that foster recovery from sickness may
differ from culture to culture. Levy (
8
), after observing the Yakut healers of Tahiti at work, reported that these healers feel an
inner force that does not offend clients
yet is conscious of its power. The shamanic claim to communicate with spirits, which is valued in the individual tribes, would be considered deviant in most Western
cultures. However, Boyer, Klopfer, Brawer, and Kawai (
9
) observed that Apache shamans received higher scores on tests of mental health than did the average
members of their society who, in turn, scored more favorably than the individuals who claimed to be shamans but were not recognized as such by their community.
Positive Client Expectation
There is abundant evidence that demonstrates the importance of client expectation. What a person
expects to happen during treatment often
will occur if the
anticipation is strong enough. Frank and Frank (
1
) describe the
symbolic message of the placebo and its ability to evoke hope. At least 50% of people who receive a
placebo will report significant relief (
1
). Such remedies as lizard blood and swine teeth have no known medicinal property, but they seem to have worked well for
centuries, apparently because clients and their healers have expected them to work.
Torrey (
4
) has identified several factors that produce client expectations—hope, faith, trust, and emotional arousal. Frank and Frank (
1
) have noted that most
psychotherapies use emotional arousal as part of the treatment, either at the beginning of therapy, followed by systematic reinforcement of newly developed skills and
attitudes, or in the latter parts of therapy, when gains of the preceding therapeutic sessions can be crystallized.
A Sense of Mastery
A client's emerging sense of mastery equips him or her with knowledge about what to do in the future to cope with life's adversities. After recovery from a physical
illness, a client may feel better and return to work. In addition, the client may have learned
self-regulation procedures, dietary and exercise regimens, and other
preventive techniques to forestall a recurrence of the ailment. If there are psychological problems, the client may have learned the proper prayers that counteract
malevolent spirits, the healthy attitudes that counteract depression and anxiety, or the dream interpretation procedures that provide for personal empowerment. Each
of these practices has the potential to bolster the client's sense of mastery and self-efficacy by providing a
myth or conceptual scheme that explains deleterious
symptoms and supplies a
ritual or procedure for overcoming them (
1
). These myths and rituals combat demoralization by strengthening the therapeutic relationship,
arousing hope, inspiring expectations of assistance, and affording opportunities for rehearsal and practice in facing life's difficulties.
Learning and mastery are important components of treatment. In addition, they are important factors in both
curing (removing the symptoms of an ailment and
restoring a client to health) and
healing (attaining wholeness of body, mind, emotions, and/or spirit). Some clients might be incapable of being
cured because their
illness is terminal. Yet those same clients could be
healed mentally, emotionally, and/or spiritually as a result of being taught by the practitioner to review their lives in
search of meaning, and thus become reconciled to death. Clients who have been
physically cured, however, may learn healing procedures that will prevent a relapse
or recurrence of their symptoms.
Proper medicinal remedies can also empower a client, even one who distrusts the practitioner. For example, a patient may not trust the nurse or physician
administering an antibiotic but will probably recover from the illness nevertheless.
THE CULTURAL CONTEXT OF HEALING SYSTEMS
Western perspectives of health emanated principally from the age of enlightenment and the philosophy of elementalism that divided the human being into body
(soma), mind
(psyche), and spirit (
pneuma). Elementalism's assumption that sickness within one component could be treated without regard to the other component
laid the groundwork for allopathic biomedicine, and the elevation of rationality in eighteenth century Western Europe made
spiritual concerns irrational and irrelevant.
Allopathic biomedicine adheres both to this rational approach and to empirical methodology, whereas many alternative medical systems
are empirical without being
rational in the Western sense, even though they work with world views that are internally consistent.
In 1925, a Nigerian
babalawo, or
father of mysteries, was summoned to England to treat an eminent Nigerian who had experienced a psychotic breakdown. The
babalawo successfully treated his client with rauwolfia root, which was better medicine than any English psychiatrist had available; it was not until 1950 that this herb
was introduced into biomedicine as the tranquilizer reserpine. Further, many Native American treatment procedures have been remarkably effective, even when
judged by current standards. Native American practitioners lanced boils, removed tumors, treated fractures and dislocations, and cleaned wounds in ways that were
more hygienic that those of the European invaders. The Hurons used evergreen needles, which are rich in vitamin C, to treat scurvy; the Shoshone used stoneseed to
produce spontaneous abortions; several tribes used the bark of willow or poplar trees, whose active ingredient, salicin, resembles today's aspirin for musculoskeletal
aches. Of the herbs used by the Rappahannock tribe, 60% were later found to have had unquestioned medicinal value—a record somewhat higher than that for the
medicines brought by the Europeans to America. The first United States pharmacopoeia, which was published in 1820, listed 296 substances, 130 of which were
originally used by Native Americans. Pharmacological analyses of the herbs used in Chinese, Tibetan, and Ayurvedic medicine, and that of other traditions, reveal
that a significant number have active medical properties (
10
).
MODELS OF TREATMENT
For several decades, social and behavioral scientists have been collecting data that reflect the wide variety of humankind's healing systems.
Sicknesses and injuries
are universal experiences, but each social group implicitly or explicitly classifies them as to cause and cure in its own way. Furthermore, each person has a belief
system that provides an explanation of how he or she can maintain health and overcome sickness. For example, Chicano (Mexican-American)
curanderos (i.e.,
healers) often attribute a sickness to an
agent whose existence must be taken on faith because it cannot be detected with medical instruments. For example, the
mal
ojo, or
evil eye, has no status in allopathic biomedicine, but the
curanderos claim it is caused by a person staring intently at someone else, usually with envy or desire
and can bring on various disorders. This condition is often treated by forming three crosses on the victim's body with an egg while the practitioner recites the Apostle's
Creed. An Apache ailment,
nitsch, is said to result from the neglect of natural entities. If an Apache does not properly salute an owl, he or she may suffer from heart
palpitations, anxiety, sweating, and shaking. Shamanic prayers and songs are needed to treat this condition, which, it is believed, can lead to suicide.
Frank and Frank (
1
) have conjectured that the first healing model was built around the prehistoric belief that the etiology of sickness was either metaphysical (e.g.,
possession by a malevolent spirit) or magical (e.g., the result of a sorcerer's curse). Treatment consisted of appropriate rituals that supposedly undid or neutralized
the cause. These rituals typically required the active participation not only of the sufferer but also family and community members. Spirits were believed to facilitate
the healing process (
9
). Some perceived causes and cures were seen to operate from the world of nature through the use of herbs, exercises, and fasts.
There are both similarities and differences between allopathic biomedical medicine models and traditional medical models that have originated and developed in a
specific place among members of a particular ethnic group (i.e., ethnomedicine). However, many anthropologists have proposed that the kind of logic developed by
tribal people is as rigorous and complete as that of Western medicine; it is not the quality of the intellectual process that differs but the mode of its expression and
application. For example, the cultural myths of pre–Columbian Mexican and Central American societies not only provided comprehensive guides to daily conduct but
also explained the mysteries of the universe. Each mythic episode can be interpreted in several ways according to the context and the listener's understanding. The
symbols used are manipulated with such economy that each serves a wide range of philosophical and religious ideas. For many Meso-Americans, Quetzalcoatl was
the
feathered serpent (who symbolized the transformation of matter into spirit), as well as the god of the winds, the Lord of Dawn, the spirit of the sacred ocelot (a
fierce jungle cat), the last king of the Toltecs, and (following the Spanish conquest) Jesus Christ.
The complexity of many traditional treatment systems can be demonstrated by evaluating them on the basis of a 12-faceted healing model
proposed by Siegler and
Osmond (
11
) (
Table 1
). In the social and behavioral sciences,
models are explicit or implicit explanatory structures that underlie a set of organized group behaviors.
The use of models in science attempts to improve understanding of the processes they represent. Certain models have been constructed to describe human conflict,
competition, and cooperation, whereas other models have been proposed to explain communicable diseases, mental illnesses, personality dynamics, and family
interactions. Greenfield (
12
) has proposed an information flow-based model to explain Brazilian spiritistic surgeries, whereas Russek and Schwartz (
13
) have
propounded a systems model to examine interpersonal relationships across the domains of cardiology, heart-brain physiology, and social psychology. The Siegler
and Osmond model is applicable to both
physical and
mental disorders, although non-Western traditions usually do not differentiate between the two. Krippner (
14
)
has modified this model, attempting to eliminate some terms that suggest a Western bias, and substituting terms that lend themselves to a more useful cross-cultural
comparison (see
Table 1
).
Table 1. Comparison of 12 Facets of Healing Models
It is beyond the scope of this introduction to describe how each system described in this book uses these fundamental aspects of healing. What follows is a
description of how five different healing systems (including biomedicine) approach these aspects.
Example 1: The Pima Indian Healing Model
Pima Indian shamanism, still active in the Southwest United States, is often regarded as subtle and sophisticated as any Western medical theory and practice. The
principles of Piman shamanism have been recorded in some detail as a result of a study in which an anthropologist, Donald Bahr, collaborated with a shaman, a Pima
Indian translator, and a linguist (
15
). Some previous anthropological studies have been flawed because tribal respondents lied to the investigators, played jokes on
them, or told them what they wanted to hear. Apparently, the anthropologists did not think that the natives they were studying had the intelligence to give information
that was incorrect! In this case, the involvement of the shaman and translator provided for greater accuracy.
P
RACTITIONERS
It is the task of the shaman to make an accurate diagnosis and then to turn the client over to other practitioners for treatment. In doing this, shamans purportedly are
assisted by
benevolent spirits; it is believed that shamans are recruited, trained, and ordered into action by these spirits.
D
IAGNOSIS
Because of its elegance, the Piman theory of health and sickness lends itself to analysis in terms of the Siegler-Osmond model. Among the Pimas,
diagnosis is as
crucial as treatment and is carried out by the shaman. A client's body is seen as the stratified repository of a lifetime's acquisitions of strengths and weaknesses.
C
AUSE
Etiology,
or cause of the sickness, depends on the type of problem that is being treated. Some types of indispositions are untreatable because the body's self-healing
capacities will deal with them (e.g., constipation, indigestion, venomous bites), or because treatment is futile (e.g., mental retardation, infant deformities). Other types
of ailments are amenable to treatment:
wandering sickness (problems caused by impurities that
wander through the body) or
staying sickness (problems caused by
improper behavior toward such
power objects as buzzard feathers, jimson weed, or roadrunners). For the Pimans, there was no separation between
physical and
mental; therefore, problems could be mental/behavioral and/or physical in nature. When the Europeans arrived, the Pimas noted that their visitors did not fall victim to
staying sicknesses. However, the Pimas did not lose faith in their model, merely concluding that the objects in question were not sacred to the Europeans; hence the
newcomers could not be punished for treating these objects with disrespect.
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