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Towards an indigenous definition of health: an explorative study to understand the indigenous Ecuadorian people’s health and illness concepts

BACKGROUNDS: An intercultural society facilitates equitable and respectful interrelations. Knowing and understanding each other’s sociocultural and linguitic contexts is a prerequisite for an intercultural society. This study explores the concepts of health and illness among healers of indigenous et...

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Autores principales: Bautista-Valarezo, Estefanía, Duque, Víctor, Verdugo Sánchez, Adriana Elizabeth, Dávalos-Batallas, Viviana, Michels, Nele R. M., Hendrickx, Kristin, Verhoeven, Veronique
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7310150/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32571404
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12939-020-1142-8
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author Bautista-Valarezo, Estefanía
Duque, Víctor
Verdugo Sánchez, Adriana Elizabeth
Dávalos-Batallas, Viviana
Michels, Nele R. M.
Hendrickx, Kristin
Verhoeven, Veronique
author_facet Bautista-Valarezo, Estefanía
Duque, Víctor
Verdugo Sánchez, Adriana Elizabeth
Dávalos-Batallas, Viviana
Michels, Nele R. M.
Hendrickx, Kristin
Verhoeven, Veronique
author_sort Bautista-Valarezo, Estefanía
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUNDS: An intercultural society facilitates equitable and respectful interrelations. Knowing and understanding each other’s sociocultural and linguitic contexts is a prerequisite for an intercultural society. This study explores the concepts of health and illness among healers of indigenous ethnicities in Southern Ecuador. METHODS: A qualitative observational study with eleven focus groups was conducted in three locations in Southern Ecuador; a total of 110 participants the Shuar, Kichwa and Mestizo ethnic groups were included. A phenomenological and hermeneutic analysis was conducted. RESULTS: Fourteen main subtopics around of two predefined themes, i.e., “Health” and “Illness” were identified: 1) four bodies, 2) religiosity, 3) health as a good diet, 4) health as god’s blessing or a gift, 5) health as balance/ harmony, 6) health as community and social welfare, 7) health as potentiality or a skill, 8) health as peacefulness, 9) heath as individual will, 10) illness as an imbalance, 11) illness as bad energy, 12) illness as a bad diet, 13) illness as suffering or worry, and 14) illness from God, Nature and People illness. By analysing all the topics’ and subtopics’ narratives, a health and illness definition was developed. The principal evidence for this new framework is the presence of interculturality as a horizontal axis in health. The indigenous perspective of health and illness focus on a balance between 4 bodies: the physical, spiritual, social and mental bodies. Additionally, “good health” is obtained through of the good diet and balanced/harmony. CONCLUSION: Indigenous healers in Southern Ecuador have views on health and illness that differ from the Western biomedical model of care. These different views must be recognized and valued in order to build an intercultural (health) system that empowers both ancestral and modern medical knowledge and healing.
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spelling pubmed-73101502020-06-23 Towards an indigenous definition of health: an explorative study to understand the indigenous Ecuadorian people’s health and illness concepts Bautista-Valarezo, Estefanía Duque, Víctor Verdugo Sánchez, Adriana Elizabeth Dávalos-Batallas, Viviana Michels, Nele R. M. Hendrickx, Kristin Verhoeven, Veronique Int J Equity Health Research BACKGROUNDS: An intercultural society facilitates equitable and respectful interrelations. Knowing and understanding each other’s sociocultural and linguitic contexts is a prerequisite for an intercultural society. This study explores the concepts of health and illness among healers of indigenous ethnicities in Southern Ecuador. METHODS: A qualitative observational study with eleven focus groups was conducted in three locations in Southern Ecuador; a total of 110 participants the Shuar, Kichwa and Mestizo ethnic groups were included. A phenomenological and hermeneutic analysis was conducted. RESULTS: Fourteen main subtopics around of two predefined themes, i.e., “Health” and “Illness” were identified: 1) four bodies, 2) religiosity, 3) health as a good diet, 4) health as god’s blessing or a gift, 5) health as balance/ harmony, 6) health as community and social welfare, 7) health as potentiality or a skill, 8) health as peacefulness, 9) heath as individual will, 10) illness as an imbalance, 11) illness as bad energy, 12) illness as a bad diet, 13) illness as suffering or worry, and 14) illness from God, Nature and People illness. By analysing all the topics’ and subtopics’ narratives, a health and illness definition was developed. The principal evidence for this new framework is the presence of interculturality as a horizontal axis in health. The indigenous perspective of health and illness focus on a balance between 4 bodies: the physical, spiritual, social and mental bodies. Additionally, “good health” is obtained through of the good diet and balanced/harmony. CONCLUSION: Indigenous healers in Southern Ecuador have views on health and illness that differ from the Western biomedical model of care. These different views must be recognized and valued in order to build an intercultural (health) system that empowers both ancestral and modern medical knowledge and healing. BioMed Central 2020-06-22 /pmc/articles/PMC7310150/ /pubmed/32571404 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12939-020-1142-8 Text en © The Author(s). 2020 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Bautista-Valarezo, Estefanía
Duque, Víctor
Verdugo Sánchez, Adriana Elizabeth
Dávalos-Batallas, Viviana
Michels, Nele R. M.
Hendrickx, Kristin
Verhoeven, Veronique
Towards an indigenous definition of health: an explorative study to understand the indigenous Ecuadorian people’s health and illness concepts
title Towards an indigenous definition of health: an explorative study to understand the indigenous Ecuadorian people’s health and illness concepts
title_full Towards an indigenous definition of health: an explorative study to understand the indigenous Ecuadorian people’s health and illness concepts
title_fullStr Towards an indigenous definition of health: an explorative study to understand the indigenous Ecuadorian people’s health and illness concepts
title_full_unstemmed Towards an indigenous definition of health: an explorative study to understand the indigenous Ecuadorian people’s health and illness concepts
title_short Towards an indigenous definition of health: an explorative study to understand the indigenous Ecuadorian people’s health and illness concepts
title_sort towards an indigenous definition of health: an explorative study to understand the indigenous ecuadorian people’s health and illness concepts
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7310150/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32571404
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12939-020-1142-8
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