Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical...

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Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers , Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’
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Page 1: Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’

Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University

‘Traditional Healers , Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers toCo-operation’

Page 2: Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’

Ma Lubisi, sangoma,

Acornhoek

Page 3: Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’

The Project: Traditional healers’ and Medical doctors’ responses to

HIV/AIDS and potential for co-operation

• Supported by Margaret Sanger Institute, Boston, USA

• Administered by Medical Care Development International

• Principle Investigators: Edward Green, Harvard University School of Public Health and Professor Robert Thornton,

Anthropology, Wits Univeristy.

Page 4: Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’

Project Details

• Conducted in Mpumalanga, Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal, April to August 2002.

• Interviews with Traditional Healers (‘Diviners’ or sangomas, Faith Healers, Herbalists) and Medical Doctors who practice in similar areas (rural, small towns and townships).

• 24 Traditional healers in KwaZulu-Natal, 11 in Mpumalanga, 21 in Gauteng

• 21 medical personnel in KwaZulu-Natal, 6 in Gauteng, and 8 in Mpumalanga (doctors and nurses).

Page 5: Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’

Project aims: To investigage

• The nature of traditional healers’ responses to HIV/AIDS

• The extent and nature of tradtional healers’ contact with each other and with bio-medical practitioners

• The attitudes held by traditional healers and medical personnel about each other.

Page 6: Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’

Who are Traditional healers?

• There are three ‘types’, none of them exclusive to each other, with some people claiming status as one, two or all types

• ‘Diviners’ (sangoma): possessed or possessors of ‘spirits’ (amadlozi); initiated; belong to mutual support groups (mpande, or ‘roots’) where they are trained and initiated;

• Faith healers (amaprofeti): Generally Christian, heal by prayer and ritual; belong to churches; practice alone;

• ‘Herbalists’: Practice as business; not possessed; learn trade from parents or other kin;

Page 7: Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’

Principle findings

• Distinction must be made between ‘cure’ and ‘treatment’

• Considerable confusion about this in traditional healing

• Some methods and herbs appear to be effective in treatment of symptoms

• Healers and MD express interest in co-operation

Page 8: Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’

Obstacles to co-operation

• Poor organisation of healers; no system of registration or qualification

• Healers themselves are dissatisfied with their organisations

• Many traditional healers are resistant to further organisation of licensing

• Nurses, especially, are hostile to Tr. healers

Page 9: Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’

Conclusions and recommendations

• Some traditional healing methods and herbs are effective in treatment of AIDS symptoms

• Closer direct or directed co-operation between MD and Traditional healers is not advisable since it is likely to decrease legitimacy of both

• Process of working in parallel is appropriate, but formal methods for cross-referral are likely to be effective

• Government intervention unlikely and probably undesirable, but education of medical personnel in traditional healing practices is appropriate and do-able

Page 10: Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’

Traditional concepts of sexuality

• Tradtional concepts of sexuality and sexual practice are poorly understood

• Further knowledge of this is essential in interventions aimed at limiting HIV and STI transmission

• There is a set of concepts about sexuality that is shared by many healers and their clients

Page 11: Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’

The flows of sexual substance in social time and space

Ancestors, the past

Children, the future

Lovers, wives and husbands

Lovers, wives and husbands

Page 12: Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’

The flows of blood and gifts

Ancestors, the past

Children, the future

Lovers, wives and husbands

Lovers, wives and husbands

Sacrifices,

ukuphahlaB

lood

Gifts

Sexual fluids

Page 13: Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’

A Sangoma’s model of the body

Blood

(Madzi)

Body

(Mmele)

‘Spirit’

(Moya)

‘Shadow’

(Seriti)

Substance

Non-substance

Enduring Transient

fluid presence

Page 14: Professor Robert Thornton, Anthropology, Wits University ‘Traditional Healers, Bio-medical Practice and Sexuality: Prospects and Barriers to Co-operation’

Thank you for your attention