Medicine Ways: Disease, Health, and Survival among Native Americans

Medicine Ways: Disease, Health, and Survival among Native Americans

Medicine Ways: Disease, Health, and Survival among Native Americans

Medicine Ways: Disease, Health, and Survival among Native Americans

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Overview

Improving the dire health problems faced by many Native American communities is central to their cultural, political, and economic well being. However, it is still too often the case that both theoretical studies and applied programs fail to account for Native American perspectives on the range of factors that actually contribute to these problems in the first place. The authors in Medicine Ways examine the ways people from a multitude of indigenous communities think about and practice health care within historical and socio-cultural contexts. Cultural and physical survival are inseparable for Native Americans. Chapters explore biomedically-identified diseases, such as cancer and diabetes, as well as Native-identified problems, including historical and contemporary experiences such as forced evacuation, assimilation, boarding school, poverty and a slew of federal and state policies and initiatives. They also explore applied solutions that are based in community prerogatives and worldviews, whether they be indigenous, Christian, biomedical, or some combination of all three. Medicine Ways is an important volume for scholars and students in Native American studies, medical anthropology, and sociology as well as for health practitioners and professionals working in and for tribes. Visit the UCLA American Indian Studies Center web site

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780759117075
Publisher: AltaMira Press
Publication date: 03/14/2001
Series: Contemporary Native American Communities , #6
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Clifford E. Trafzer (Wyandot) is a professor of history and director of Native American Studies at the University of California, Riverside. Diane Weiner is a professional research anthropologist at the American Indian Studies Center, University of California, Los Angeles.

Table of Contents


Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2
Chapter 1: Removing the Heart of the Choctaw People: Indian Removal from a Native Perspective
Chapter 3
Chapter 2: Blood Came from Their Mouths: Tongva and Chumash Responses to the Pandemic of 1801
Chapter 4
Chapter 3: In the fall of the year we were troubled by some sickness: Typhoid Fever Deaths at Sherman Institute, 1904
Chapter 5
Chapter 4: Blinded with Science: American Indians, the Office of Indian Affairs, and the Federal Campaign against Trachoma, 1924-1927
Chapter 6
Chapter 5: Infant Mortality on the Yakama Indian Reservation, 1914-1964
Chapter 7
Chapter 6: American Indian Views of Public Health Nursing, 1930-1950
Chapter 8
Chapter 7: Interpreting Ideas about Diabetes, Genetics, and Inheritance
Chapter 9
Chapter 8: The Embodiment of a Working Identity: Power and Process in Rarámuri Ritual Healing
Chapter 10
Chapter 9: Meeting the Challenges of American Indian Diabetes: Anthropological Perspectives on Prevention and Treatment
Chapter 11
Chapter 10: Pathways to Health: An American Indian Breast-Cancer Education Project
Chapter 12
Chapter 11: Cancer among American Indians and Alaska Natives: Trouble with Numbers
Chapter 13
Chapter 12: The Origins of Navajo Youth Gangs
Chapter 14
Chapter 13: Helplessness, Hopelessness, and Despair: Identifying the Precursors to Indian Youth Suicide
Chapter 15
Chapter 14: Self-Sufficiency and Community Revitalization among American Indians in the Southwest: American Indian Leadership Training
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