New shapes and original creations: the dependent nature of the individual in a Nahua community in Mexico.

Acta Biomed

Department of Molecular Medicine, Unit of History of Medicine, Sapienza University of Rome, Viale dell'Università 34a, 00185, Roma.

Published: September 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • The article examines how acculturation has influenced traditional medical practices among the Nahua community in Naupan, Mexico, leading to changes in their understanding of health and diagnosis.
  • The research is based on an ethnographic study conducted in Naupan, a rural area with a population of 1,614, focusing on local perceptions of diseases and the fluid nature of individual health.
  • Findings highlight that without established medical systems, health concepts in the community are subjective and vary widely, with individuals adapting and blending various medical traditions to form their own health knowledge and treatment practices.

Article Abstract

Background And Aim Of The Work: Within of Nahua of Naupan, the impact of acculturation processes by the historical interconnection between different models of medicine has given rise to important revisions and reinterpretations of local medical culture. The main purpose of this article is the observation of dynamics and aspects related to processes of understanding, perception and management of diagnostic categories, as well as the local understanding of the person (the individual) in the rural district of Naupan, located in the North East part of Sierra de Puebla.

Methods: The analysis presented in this work is the result of an ethnographic study carried out at the Nahua community (1,614 people) residing in the rural town of Naupan (Huauchinango, Puebla, Mexico).

Results: The attention will be given to the synthetic analysis of the local conceptions of certain pathologies and how the individual is seen as an unstable and constantly changing aggregate, situated in a context where health-related issues are clearly linked to different levels of perceived reality.

Conclusions: In settings where there are no systems of institutionalized medical knowledge, nosological concepts are seen in a subjective and indeterminate manner, due to the fact that in some cases they also vary considerably depending on the person. Faced with the choice of therapeutic options, the Naupeña population moves between integrating and rejecting medical concepts from different cultural horizons, through a continuous creation of knowhow that they see as more or less organized and transmissible knowledge about disease, treatments and methods of prevention and interpretation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7233743PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.23750/abm.v90i3.7027DOI Listing

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