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The Effects of Local Medicinal Knowledge and Hygiene on Helminth Infections in an Amazonian Society

Publication year: 2011
Source: Social Science & Medicine, In Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available online 20 January 2011

Susan, Tanner , Maria E., Chuquimia-Choque , Tomás, Huanca , Thomas W., McDade , William R., Leonard , …

Social science has long recognized the importance of understanding how interactions between culture and behavior shape disease patterns, especially in resource-poor areas where individuals draw on multiple medical treatments to maintain health. While global health programs aimed at controlling high infection rates of soil-transmitted helminthes among indigenous groups often acknowledge the value of local culture, little research has been able to examine this value. This study investigates the association between parental ethnomedical knowledge, parental biomedical knowledge, and household sanitation behavior and childhood soil-transmitted helminth infections among a group of foragers-farmers in the Bolivian Amazon (Tsimane’). During 2007, a parasitological survey…

Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 01/21/2011 | Link to this post on IFP |
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