Abstract

The presence of mainstream medicine in local medical systems inserts a set of external treatments and concepts that generate adjustments in the local conceptions of health and disease. What points in the system are most receptive to change? Who are the residents most likely to adopt these external treatments to deal with diseases? To answer these questions, this work used a study model consisting of the simultaneous use of medicinal plants and modern medicine, testing whether diseases that require greater treatment efforts are the main targets of adherence to modern medicine and if socioeconomic characteristics of residents can cause intracultural variation in relation to simultaneous use. To obtain socioeconomic data on the knowledge of medicinal plants and simultaneous use of these resources with modern medicine, semistructured interviews were conducted in a rural community that has easy access to modern medicine. Participatory workshops were held to access the local perceptions about the frequency of occurrence and severity of illnesses. A multilevel logistic regression model was applied for data analysis. We found that chronic, severe and frequently occurring diseases in the community tended to show greater simultaneous use locally. Among the socioeconomic factors, we determined that high educational levels positively influenced the combined use of plants and modern medicine. The need to ensure the cure of frequent, severe and chronic diseases is a factor that leads residents to seek a greater number of possible treatments, stimulating the combined use of plants and modern medicine. Residents with higher educational levels were more likely to use a combination of treatments than those with lower educational levels, demonstrating that more participation in formal education may facilitate the combined use of medicinal plants and modern medicine.

Highlights

  • Local medical systems (LMS) are the social institutions and traditions that have been generated by the evolution of strategies linked to health promotion in small human groups [1, 2]

  • To better understand these factors, we are using a model that combines the use of modern medicine with medicinal plants in a rural community in Northeast Brazil

  • Factors that influence the combined use of medicinal plants and modern medicine Among the 99 participants in the study, 53 mentioned simultaneous use of medicinal plants with modern medicine, showing that the practice is well spread in the community studied

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Summary

Introduction

Local medical systems (LMS) are the social institutions and traditions that have been generated by the evolution of strategies linked to health promotion in small human groups [1, 2]. A cosmopolitan medical system (CMS) is related to the global way of dealing with health problems [2], based on scientifically validated methods Often, these two medical systems are not isolated from each other, which yields a high variety of treatments and concepts about health and disease in the same human population [3]. Varying adjustments of local health practices to the existence of external forms of healing have characterized the medical system hybridization process [4] This dynamic has been a source of ethnobotanical studies, in which researchers commonly evaluate whether or not the presence of modern medicine coexists with the use of medicinal plants [5,6,7,8,9]. To better understand these factors, we are using a model that combines the use of modern medicine with medicinal plants in a rural community in Northeast Brazil

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