|
Back to Index
Traditional
healers boost primary health care
Itai
Madamombe, Africa Renewal
Extracted from Africa Renewal, Vol.19 #4 (January 2006)
January 2006
http://www.un.org/ecosocdev/geninfo/afrec/vol19no4/194trad-healers.html
The sun was
relentless. So were the dozens of faces stubbornly waiting to enter
the tiny thatched hut in Zimbabwe where Nhamburo Masango, a traditional
healer, sat among herbs, bones and other remedies. An old man in
front of me had a skin rash, another person a swollen leg, and somewhere
a child complained of a stomach ache. No one, it seemed, was discouraged
by the long, winding queue.
For many poor
Zimbabweans there is nowhere else to go. Traditional healers are
often the first and last line of defence against the most contagious
and debilitating diseases that plague their lives. Although Western
medicine is generally accepted throughout Africa, it has not replaced
but rather augmented indigenous health approaches. Practitioners
such as Mr. Masango remain central to the lives of many. The World
Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 80 per cent of people
in Africa regularly seek their services.
A traditional
healer in Uganda treating a patient’s dizziness
Yet
healers, for the most part, are not officially recognized by governments.
They operate outside formal health structures. But leaving traditional
healers on the sidelines can have serious consequences. Some patients,
preferring the healers, may disregard their doctor’s advice or take
herbal medicines that could have dangerous interactions with pharmaceuticals.
By working with these healers, doctors would be gaining allies who
live in the patient’s own community.
"We have,
for a long time, been telling the government that they cannot go
it alone in the delivery of health," Gordon Chavhunduka, the
director of the Zimbabwe National Traditional Healers’ Association,
told a reporter in August. "There has been a lot of tension
between the government and us over our usefulness." Prohibitive
medical costs also make it impossible for the poor to get medical
attention, he added. People are opting for traditional healers,
who do not always demand cash up front and who far outnumber doctors.
But the issue
goes beyond access. Traditional healing is linked to wider belief
systems and remains integral to the lives of most Africans. People
consult traditional healers whether or not they can afford medical
services. In my own case, I could afford the best health care Zimbabwe
could provide. Two weeks before coming home for a visit, I had undergone
an exhaustive medical examination at one of the better hospitals
in the US city of Boston, where I lived at the time. In Zimbabwe,
although I was not in dire need of medical attention, my mother
insisted that I have another "check-up" before going back
to the US. There are some things Western medicine cannot fathom,
she insisted.
Doctors trained
in the Western sciences largely focus on the bio-medical causes
of disease, while traditional beliefs take a more holistic approach.
In Zimbabwe, traditional healers are reputed to divine the cause
of a person’s illness or social problems by throwing bones to interpret
the will of dead ancestors. Some healers say they directly channel
the ancestral spirit through their bodies. Many have in-depth knowledge
of plant materials and their various curative powers. They use leaves,
seeds, stems, bark or roots to treat symptoms. Animal parts and
minerals are also employed, but to a lesser extent. Most traditional
healers are both herbalists and diviners, but some specialize in
one aspect. Many doctors believe healers to be charlatans, preying
on the superstitions of local families. This is true in some — but
not all — cases.
Regulating
traditional healers
The
gulf between modern and traditional practitioners has narrowed somewhat
in the past decade. WHO advocates incorporating safe and effective
traditional medicine into primary health-care systems. In 2002,
the organization issued its first comprehensive guidelines to help
countries, such as Zimbabwe, develop policies to regulate traditional
medicine.
The Zimbabwean
government announced in July that it will regularize the trade.
Plans include forming a healers’ council that will, among
other things, authenticate the efficacy of herbal medicines. Minister
of Health and Child Welfare, David Parirenyatwa, expressed concern
that some healers claim to posses cures for various terminal ailments,
among them HIV/AIDS. There is no way to evaluate such claims without
a council representing all the healers, he explained. "There
is need for some standardization of operations," Dr. Parirenyatwa
suggested during a meeting with local traditional healers. "For
instance, people should be able to consult registered and licenced
traditional healers at proper premises. Currently, traditional healers
are operating in all sorts of places like truck stops and backyard
rooms. That has to change."
Traditional
healers are already a trusted source of health information and treatment.
Given appropriate skills and means, they are well placed to play
a bigger role in combating Africa’s major diseases.
South Africa
leads continental efforts to bring traditional healers into a legal
framework. In early 2005, parliament approved a law to recognize
the country’s estimated 200,000 healers as health-service providers.
Those registered would, for example, be allowed to prescribe sick
leave and offer treatment for numerous conditions. Some hailed this
as an important step in rooting out charlatans and protecting patients,
but others saw it differently.
Doctors for Life, which represents over a thousand health
practitioners in South Africa, objected to the government’s plans
to legitimize healers. "Most of the medicines used by traditional
practitioners have not been validated scientifically," stated
Doctors for Life. "Many people suffer because of the serious
complications that arise due to the use of traditional medicines."
The group warned that such a law could open "a can of worms"
of legal controversies and medical complications. They urged that
remedies be thoroughly researched before approval. Other medical
practitioners point out that traditional healers, with or without
the support of the law, are already providing services within communities.
Bringing them within the primary-health fold would therefore help
rather than hinder efforts to flush out harmful practices.
Collaboration
between healers and doctors
There
is growing realization that it is possible for traditional and Western
practitioners to work together to improve patients’ well-being,
especially when it comes to developing new medications, reporting
new cases of contagious diseases and finding ways to ensure that
patients stick to their prescribed treatments.
In Tanzania,
the Dar es Salaam-based Institute of Traditional Medicine
has a pilot programme to test the efficacy of local herbs in helping
reduce the severity of other illnesses often seen in HIV patients.
Herbalists are allowing the institute to evaluate the substances
they use to treat patients. If scientists discover beneficial elements
in the herbs, they purify them and determine what the proper dosage
should be. This addresses a major concern that some people have
with the way medicines have been prescribed by traditional healers.
Some 25 herbalists are currently working with the institute.
We accept that
"some herbs respond positively to some of the diseases associated
with HIV/AIDS, and these need to be worked on to understand their
functioning," says Dr. Edmund Kayombo, who is helping the institute
establish the effectiveness of traditional herbs. These herbs include
remedies for strengthening the immune system, increasing appetite
and treating oral thrush, skin rashes and diarrhoea. They cannot
be expected to cure HIV, he says, but they can lessen some of the
symptoms that occur frequently in people with HIV.
Traditional
healers can be particularly effective in monitoring disease outbreaks.
They live within communities and are likely to be the first to know
if any new disease surfaces. Ms. Nora Groce and Ms. Mary Reeve,
medical anthropologists, argue that open lines of communication
between traditional healers and the medical community could tremendously
improve surveillance. Health officials must include traditional
healers in their educational outreach to doctors and must be trained
to know what information they should request from healers. "Traditional
healers must be taught why, what, when and how to report unusual
symptoms in their patients to local officials," Ms. Groce and
Ms. Reeve state. Checklists or pictorial guides to symptoms, diseases
and modes of transmission could facilitate communication between
healers and officials, they say.
To an extent,
an informal system of referral already exists between traditional
practitioners and doctors. But traditional healers complain that
information largely flows in only one direction. "Traditional
healers already send referral letters to clinics," notes Dr.
James Hartzell, a professor at South Africa’s University of
KwaZulu/Natal medical school. They "are just asking for
at least basic information back from the biomedical team, which
is often hostile to them, such as what were patients given in terms
of treatment."
Dr. Hartzell
is working on a project to improve collaboration between doctors
and healers in caring for people with HIV/AIDS. It includes training
350 healers in prevention, voluntary counselling and testing, home-based
care and antiretroviral therapy. He believes patients listen well
to traditional healers. That gives healers the potential to make
"a big impact on patient compliance and management, with good
collaboration from the biomedical team."
Healers
boost patient compliance
Traditional
healers are already a trusted source of health information and treatment.
Given appropriate skills and means, they are well placed to play
a bigger role in combating Africa’s major diseases.
The incidence
of tuberculosis (TB) was on the rise in the Hlabisa district of
KwaZulu/Natal, up by 360 per cent in the seven years prior to 1999.
TB can be easily cured if patients take their medication every day
and complete the course. But with the treatment lasting between
six and eight months, many drop out. However, an innovative partnership
between medical and traditional practitioners helped reduce the
spread through a course that trained healers to supervise and record
the doses taken by each patient to ensure proper compliance.
"We were
also taught about the symptoms of TB, so that, when we pick them
up in any of our other patients, we can refer people for a test,"
said Jack Nyawuza, one of the 25 traditional healers who volunteered
in the campaign. "This information added to what we learn in
our training as healers." Patients were delighted that the
healers received this training: the healers lived nearby and could
make home visits when patients were too sick to go to them.
The results
were quite remarkable. Overall, 89 per cent of those supervised
by traditional healers completed treatment, compared with 67 per
cent supervised by other volunteers. And the death rate of traditional
healers’ patients was two-thirds lower. Healers welcomed their newfound
respect within the medical community. "I was trained to help
and heal people, so being the TB treatment supervisor is a continuation
of my profession," Mr. Nyawuza said.
Many traditional
healers are willing to incorporate standards of Western medicine.
In Zimbabwe, following a massive government campaign to end practices
that could facilitate the spread of HIV, healers condemned using
a razor blade to cut the skin on more than one person when medication
must be rubbed into the flesh. Luckily — since I have a low threshold
for pain — the medication Mr. Masango prescribed for me did not
call for any cutting. I keep the bitter-sweet red root he prescribed
for headaches next to my Imitrex from GlaxoSmithKline.
I enjoy the best of both worlds.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|