Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper responds broadly to two critical issues. First, is the concept of Complementary and Alternative Medicines (CAM) in the context of Africa’s and global value system that imposes one form of health practice as a dominant (and, therefore, mainstream) healthcare system and other types as alternatives to it. Secondly, is the place of CAM in Africa’s health policies. Within the context of Africa’s health system, the conceptualisation of indigenous medical knowledge and its value about its history, practices, traditions, and cosmology as CAM, undermines the heritage of a people and denies the multiple realities of a polyvocal world. Any society with a healthy population before modernity demonstrates the possession of a valid medical knowledge and a responsive healthcare system. The dismal health indicators of contemporary Africa speak to the lack of political will and the challenges inherent in Africa’s health policies that undermine the reservoir of indigenous medical knowledge and methods. Using examples of endogenous healing, the potential benefits and constraints associated with African medical experience and practices are discussed.

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