Snakebites from the standpoint of an indigenous anthropologist from the Brazilian Amazon.

Toxicon

School of Health Sciences, Universidade Do Estado Do Amazonas, Brazil; Department of Teaching and Research, Fundaçao de Medicina Tropical Dr Heitor Vieira Dourado, Manaus, Brazil. Electronic address:

Published: October 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Indigenous caregivers in the Brazilian Amazon face challenges when trying to practice their healing methods in hospitals, highlighting a conflict between traditional and colonial medical perspectives.
  • An interview with Baniwa indigenous anthropologist Francy Baniwa reveals that the indigenous understanding of nature and healing involves broader concepts, including the roles of non-human entities in health and illness.
  • Effective communication and collaboration between health agents and indigenous communities require mutual understanding and respect for their unique cultural perspectives on healthcare and existence.

Article Abstract

Conflicting attempts between indigenous caregivers trying to exercise their healing practices in hospitals have been recorded in the Brazilian Amazon. In this work, we present an interview with the Baniwa indigenous anthropologist Francy Baniwa. In an external and colonial interpretation, it was previously stated that indigenous people attribute the origin of snakebites as supernatural and that indigenous medicine, when it saves a patient from complications and death, has symbolic efficacy. In this interview, we observed that this form of interpretation is asymmetric because, for indigenous people, their understanding of nature is broader than ours, with more possibilities of ways of existence, including non-human entities as well or ill-intentioned as humans. The interaction of humans with these identities produces a form of existence with its own clinical reality, which is full of symbolism. Effective communication between health agents and indigenous patients and caregivers must undergo this exercise of otherness and interculturality.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.toxicon.2023.107289DOI Listing

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