The Interrelationship Between Scientific And Traditional Medical Systems. A Study Of Ghana.
Date
1972
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Ghana
Abstract
The study was devoted to the investigation of a common phenomenon
in developing countries - i.e., the co-presence of scientific and
traditional medical systems. The aim was to explicate the nature of
the interrelationship between scientific and traditional medical systems,
to discover the continuing functions of traditional medical practice,
and to elucidate some of the determinants of the pattern of articulation
between the medical systems and the larger society. The focus of the
study was directed to Ghana, with implications for other developing
countries.
The study required a perspective which incorporated certain
features of both a rational and a functionalist model. From the former
the idea was developed that men plan consciously to take into account
not only their successes but their recognized failures. From the
latter, emphasis was placed upon the social system and its formally
stated goals, considered as the main organizational ends. This perspective
enabled us to focus upon one of the crucial problems in
sociology: how a measure of integration, vis-a-vis the medical systems,
is maintained in the face of inevitable changes from sources both
external and internal to it.
Methodologically, the study was limited to examination of
published data; no primary field research has been carried out. The
available data have been subjected to preliminary analysis in terms of
the concepts and problems of contemporary social science.
Four conclusions were reached: (1) that traditional medicine
or its functional equivalent would never wholly disappear from the
Ghanaian scene; (2) that the limited utility of scientific medicine
in the area of psychosomatic disorders leaves a relatively permanent
area of chronic ills within which traditional medicine may survive at
least in the rural setting; (3) that an interaction occurs in the
traditional setting between the two medical systems which tends to create
a division of function between traditional and scientific medical
practices; and (4) that a kind of pragmatism acts as a selective
principle to help determine which method of treatment is chosen.
Description
Thesis(PhD)_University of Ghana,1972.
Keywords
Traditional Medicine, Scientific Medicine, psychosomatic Disorders, Ghana