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A Case Study of Disease and Culture in Action: Leprosy Among the Hausa of Northern Nigeria

Abstract

In an earlier theoretical paper1 it was postulated that no culture, irrespective of its degree of simplicity or complexity, functions without a range of medical knowledge and beliefs, practices and practitioners. It was advanced that this medical constellation does not operate in a chaotic or haphazard manner, but rather that it may be appraised as a system—a system of medicine. It was further postulated that all systems of medicine, again irrespective of the degree of simplicity or complexity of the cultures, do not perform in a chance, meaningless fashion, but rather that they operate within a definite range of behavior. The interaction of culturally different medical practitioners, diagnoses and treatments, accordingly, need not be an individualistic, subjective affair; it can be appraised and calculated by rational scientific methods allowing for effective prognostication. In a series of papers this reasoning was tested in one particular cul-ture area, the Middle East,2 and a paradigm was structured concerning the dynamics which can occur when the system of medicine of the Middle East interacts with that of the West.3

More information

Type
Journal Article
Author
Shiloh A