The efficacy of ethnomedicine: research methods in trouble
- PMID: 1881295
- DOI: 10.1080/01459740.1991.9966038
The efficacy of ethnomedicine: research methods in trouble
Abstract
One of the tasks of medical anthropology is to conduct research to evaluate the efficacy of traditional health care practices. The benefits of health care may be evaluated in numerous ways, but in this article we examine only the problem of how to determine whether a therapeutic intervention changes the pathophysiology of a disease. The randomized controlled trial is acknowledged as an ideal that will rarely be attainable by medical ethnographers. Individual case studies are primarily useful for hypothesis formation. We are left then with observational studies (case series) as a feasible and useful alternative. Those presently in the anthropological literature are examined and each is found to be flawed to some extent. Future investigations can profit from what was learned in these pioneer studies by giving more attention to patient selection, treatment description, and objective measures of outcome.
Comment in
-
Ethnomedicine: diverse trends, common linkages.Med Anthropol. 1991 Jun;13(1-2):137-71. doi: 10.1080/01459740.1991.9966045. Med Anthropol. 1991. PMID: 1881297 Review. No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources