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Published in: Journal of Community Health 1/2018

Open Access 01-02-2018 | Original Paper

Integrating Traditional Healers into the Health Care System: Challenges and Opportunities in Rural Northern Ghana

Authors: Eva Krah, Johannes de Kruijf, Luigi Ragno

Published in: Journal of Community Health | Issue 1/2018

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Abstract

Traditional medicine is widespread in Ghana, with 80% of Ghanaians relying on its methods for primary health care. This paper argues that integrating traditional and biomedical health systems expands the reach and improves outcomes of community health care. Moving beyond literature, it stresses the importance of trust-relationships between healers and biomedical staff. Insights are based on qualitative research conducted in Ghana’s Northern Region (2013–2014). Five challenges to integration emerged out of the data: a lack of understanding of traditional medicine, discrimination, high turnover of biomedical staff, declining interest in healing as a profession, and equipment scarcity. Besides challenges, opportunities for integration exist, including the extensive infrastructure of traditional medicine, openness to collaboration, and grassroots initiatives. Contemplating challenges and opportunities this paper provides recommendations for integration, including: identify/select healers, promote best practices, institute appropriate forms of appreciation/recognition of healers, provide aid and equipment, use communication campaigns to promote integration and steer attitudinal change towards healers among biomedical staff. Most crucial, we argue successful implementation of these recommendations depends on a concerted investment in relationships between healers and biomedical staff.
Footnotes
1
The WHO defines traditional medicine as: “the sum total of the knowledge, skill, and practices based on the theories, beliefs, and experiences indigenous to different cultures, whether explicable or not, used in the maintenance of health as well as in the prevention, diagnosis, improvement or treatment of physical and mental illness” [4].
 
2
The Ebola epidemic of 2014 in West Africa and its concomitant risk of spreading across the world demonstrated, improving local health care has global pay-offs. It also reveals the dangers of a lack of integration/understanding. (Foreign) medical aid workers were uninformed about local customs and belief systems, and local populations tended to seek advice and care from traditional healers whom they knew and trusted [11]. Medical interventions by the international community were thus severely hampered [12].
 
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Metadata
Title
Integrating Traditional Healers into the Health Care System: Challenges and Opportunities in Rural Northern Ghana
Authors
Eva Krah
Johannes de Kruijf
Luigi Ragno
Publication date
01-02-2018
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Community Health / Issue 1/2018
Print ISSN: 0094-5145
Electronic ISSN: 1573-3610
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10900-017-0398-4

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