Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/39036
Título: Amazonian Forest Peoples' Perceptions of Malaria on the Upper Rio Negro, Brazil, are Shaped by Both Local and Scientific Knowledge
Autor: Frausin, Gina
Dos Santos Bruno, Ana Carla
Freitas Hidalgo, Ari De
Ming, Lin Chau
Milliken, William
Pohlit, Adrian Martin
Palavras-chave: Indigenous knowledge
epidemic
tropical disease
Data do documento: 3-Nov-2022
Revista: Journal of Ethnobiology
É parte de: Volume 42, Número 3
Abstract: Malaria is endemic in Brazilian Amazonia, accounting for 99% of national cases. Amazonian forest peoples (both Indigenous and traditional) understand and treat the disease based on their knowledge, rituals, and religion. In recent decades, biomedical health coverage has expanded in the region, with implications for local perceptions and practices to prevent, treat, and recover from malaria. This paper attempts to understand how the expansion of biomedical healthcare among forest peoples interacts with their ethnomedicinal knowledge. Our results clearly indicate that most of our research participants in rural northwest Amazonia believe that malaria has a variety of causes, forms of prevention, and treatment. We also found that these beliefs are shaped by both local knowledge (including Indigenous) and some technical concepts of biomedicine. Consequently, new approaches and practices in healthcare need to be developed which consider forest peoples' perceptions and understanding.
ISSN: 02780771
DOI: 10.2993/0278-0771-42.3.5
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