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Integration of African traditional health practitioners and medicine into the health care management system in the province of LimpopoLatif, Shamila Suliman 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPA (Public Management and Planning))--University of Stellenbosch, 2010. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT:
The Department of Health estimates that 80 percent of South Africans consult traditional
healers before consulting modern medicine. The aim of this study is to investigate the
extent of the use of traditional medicine in local communities in the Limpopo Province, and
add value to a draft policy that was introduced by the Minister of Health. (South Africa,
Department of Health 2007a)
Traditional healers are regarded as an important national health resource. They share the
same cultural beliefs and values as their patients. They are respected in their
communities. In South Africa, traditional healers have no formal recognition as health care
professionals.
Despite the advantages of modern medicine, there is a dramatic evolution in traditional
medicine developing and developed countries. In recognition of the value that traditional
medicine has added to people’s health needs, government organisations have realised the
gap and needed to embark on public participation to bring to light the solution, by
implementing a relevant policy (Matomela 2004).
According to research done by Pefile (2005), positive outcomes that resulted from the use
of traditional medicine include a more holistic treatment, a wider choice of health care that
suits people’s needs, and scientific advancement, this paves a way forward for a policy to
be put into place for the legal recognition of traditional medicine. New legislations have
been brought about in regulating traditional medicine and practitioners.
This paper provides a synopsis of government initiatives to close the gap and address the
concerns of integrating traditional and modern medicine. The thesis addresses the
challenges involved in incorporating the two disciplines for the best possible impact of
local communities in accessing their rights as vested in the constitution.
The study is a qualitative study where relevant practicing traditional healers, users,
Western doctors, nurses, managers and government policy makers were interviewed
regarding the draft policy on traditional medicine. This was to obtain information on the
challenges, gaps and possible solutions regarding the integration of African traditional
medicine into the health care system of Southern Africa. Findings show the following: a majority of traditional healers do not agree to scientific trialling and testing on the herbs
that they prescribe, and Western doctors feel that traditional healers should only treat
patients spiritually unless they have a scientifically tested scope and limitations on their
field. The study also found that traditional healers want to be registered and integrated
into the health care system, but do not agree to have regulated price fixing. Other
conclusions included that the communities seek traditional help for cultural reasons and
more benevolent purposes, but are changing their focus towards seeking medical help
from clinics where it is provided for them. However, people within the communities are
still confused whether to seek traditional or western medicine and therefore seek both. It
was found that medications are not readily available in district clinics and hospital waiting
times force people into seeking traditional help. Nurses, doctors and caregivers
acknowledge that traditional healers are hampering the health care of patients by delaying
hospital treatment of patients hence progressing illnesses. However, they also state that
traditional healers help people spiritually and mentally. Therefore policy makers have
found solutions to educate healers and create regulatory boards to limit and create a
scope of practice for traditional healers.
Recommendations and solutions for the relevant policy are as follows:
It is recommended that traditional health practitioners should only be allowed to practice
and train over the age of 21. They must be prohibited from certain procedures, for
example: drawing blood, treating cancers, and treating AIDS/HIV. They should only be
allowed to practice midwifery if they have had training. They should be prohibited from
administering injections and supervised drugs, unless trained at a tertiary level traditional
healers can be used as home caregivers, spiritual healers, and traditional advice
counselling entities in the communities. Traditional healers must be prevented from
referring to themselves as a ‘doctor’ or ‘professor’. This misleads people into believing that
they are allopathic doctors. ‘Traditional health practitioners’ must realise that they are
holistic healers, and must be addressed as such. A strong recommendation is to rename
‘traditional health practitioners’ as ‘spiritual practitioners’.
With regards to regulations, it must be imperative that every practicing traditional health
practitioner be registered annually with the relevant board. A good suggestion is for
traditional health practitioners (THP) to attend formal training courses, under an experienced herbalist, and it should be documented on paper. A written record of the
location of practice, and specialty must also be documented. There must be policies on
health and safety, hygiene and sterility that need to be in place. It is suggested that
training on patient confidentially must be taught and implemented. A code of conduct and
a standard of professional ethics must also be implemented. Health and safety regulations
pertaining to the profession and the citizens must be listed. Efforts towards dispelling
myths and making people aware, thereby filtering out the positive side of the traditional
medicine (e.g. medical benefits with some herbs), and rooting out the ‘quack’ practices
(e.g. the use of amulets around a patient’s body to cure diseases) should be practiced.
Pertaining to co-operative relationships between modern medical doctors and traditional
practitioners, it is recommended that the use of exchange workshops between the two
professionals needs to be developed. Also scientific information and technology must be
available to traditional healers. A continued professional development (CPD) programme
should be a mandatory requirement, as for all other health care professionals. It seems
the development of traditional hospitals, in which a scope of practice is defined, can be
used as a recovery ward and a spiritual guidance centre.
The above recommendations will encourage a healthier, safer and transparent health care
system in South Africa, where all disciplines of medicine co-exist in one National Health
Care System. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING:
Nadat navorsing deur die Departement van Gesondheid gedoen is, is daar gevind dat 80
persent van Suid-Afrikaners tradisionele genesers besoek. Die doel van hierdie navorsing
is om ondersoek te doen na die gebruik van tradisionele medisyne deur landelike
gemeenskappe in die Limpopo Provinsie, en om ook ‘n bydrae te lewer tot die
konsepbeleid wat deur die Minister van Gesondheid bekendgestel is (South Africa,
Department of Health 2007a).
Tradisionele genesers kan beskou word as ‘n belangrike hulpbron in die nasionale
gesondheidsdiens. Hulle deel in kulturele gelowe en waardes van hulle pasiente en word
ook gerespekteer in hulle gemeenskappe. Suid-Afrika egter, gee geen erkenning aan
tradisionele genesers of die feit dat hulle in die gesondheidsdiens is nie.
Ondanks die feit van moderne geneesmiddels, is daar ‘n dramatiese evolusie wat besig is
om plaas te vind in die Westerse Wêreld. Die erkenning en waarde van tradisionele
medisyne wat bydra tot mense se gesondheidkwaliteit, het daartoe gelei dat
Staatsorganisasies begin insien het dat daar ‘n gaping is en dat publieke peilings gedoen
word om ‘n oplossing te vind en ‘n beleidsdokument saam te stel wat tradisionele
genesers insluit (Matomela 2004).
Die ondersoek wat Pefile (2005) gedoen het, het positiewe resultate getoon by die gebruik
van tradisionele medisyne wat ‘n holistiese behandeling in ‘n wyer verskeidendheid van
medisyne insluit by gebruikers. Ook die wetenskaplike vooruitgang van tradisionele
medisyne het daartoe bygedra dat ‘n beleidsdokument in plek gesit word vir die wettige
erkenning daarvan. Nuwe wetgewing is in werking gestel om beheer uit te oefen oor
tradisionele genesers en tradisionele medisyne.
Hierdie dokument verskaf ‘n sinopsis van die Staat se inisiatiewe om die gaping tussen
moderne medisyne en tradisionele medisyne aan te spreek en ook om landelike
gemeenskappe toe te laat om hulle reg uit te oefen soos wat in die Grondwet vervat is.
Die studie is kwalitatief waar relevante praktiserende tradisionele genesers, verbruikers,
Westerse dokters, verpleegkundiges, bestuurders en staatsdiensbeleidvormers ondervra is
oor ‘n konsep beleidsdokument oor tradisionele medisyne. Dit was gedoen om informasie rakende die uitdaging , gapings en 'n moontlike oplossing te vind vir die integrasie van
Afrika se tradisionele medisyne in die gesondheidsorgsisteem van Suidelike Afrika.
Belangrike bevindings sluit die volgende in: die meerdeerheid tradisionele genesers stem
nie saam dat wetenskaplike toetse gedoen word op kruie wat hulle voorskryf nie;
tradisionele genesers will geregisteer en geïntegreer word in die gesondheidsorgsisteem
maar stem nie saam oor prysregulering en prysvasstelling nie; Westerse dokters is van
mening dat tradisionele genesers net pasiënte geestelik moet kan behandel tensy hulle ‘n
wetenskaplik getoetse doel en beperkings in hulle veld het; Westerse dokters glo dat
tradisionele genesers dwarsboom die gesondheidsorgsisteem deurdat hulle behandeling
vetraag; die gemeenskap soek tradisionele hulp op vir kulturele redes en ander
welwillendheidsredes maar gaan soek mediese hulp by klinieke waar dit aan hulle verskaf
word; mense van gemeenskappe is verward en raadpleeg beide tradisionele genesers en
Westerse dokters vir hulp; sommige medisyne is nie altyd by klinieke beskikbaar nie en
mense sien nie kans om in lang rye te wag by hospitale nie en dit noop dat hulle
tradisionele medisyne gebruik; verpleegkundiges en gesondheidswerkers erken dat
tradisionele genesers mense vertraag om gesondheidsorg en behandeling by hospitale te
kry, maar verstaan ook dat tradisionele genesers aan mense geestelike hulp verleen; en
besleidskrywers moet oplossings vind om tradisionele genesers op te voed en om
komitees te stig wat tradisionele genesers se ruimte van praktisering in toom te hou.
Die volgende word as voorstelle tot aanpassing van die genoemde beleidsdokument
geïdentifiseer:-
Tradisionele genesers mag alleenlik praktiseer en opleiding verskaf na die ouderdom van
21 jaar. Hulle moet verbied word om sekere prosedures, byvoorbeeld die trek van bloed;
behandeling van HIV/VIGS; om voor te gee dat hulle mediese praktisyns is; om
vroedvroue te wees slegs indien gekwalifiseer daartoe; om inspuitings toe te dien en
medisyne uit te reik slegs indien hulle tersiëre opleiding gehad het. Tradisionele genesers
se dienste kan gebruik word as gemeenskapsgesondheid hulpwerkers, geestelike
genesers, en kan tradisionele advies en begeleiding aan die gemeenskap lewer.
Tradisionele genesers moet belet word om die titels “Dokter” en “Professor" te gebruik.
Tradisionele genesers moet daarop let dat hulle holistiese genesers is en moet
daarvolgens aangespreek word. Hulle moenie pasiënte mislei deur voor te gee dat hulle allopatiese geneeshere is nie. “Tradisionele genesers” moet hernoem word na “geestelike
genesers”.
Tradisionele genesers moet by ‘n erkende organisasie geregistreer word en moet so-ook
jaarliks registrasie hernu. Formele onderrig wat deur ‘n ervare kruiegeneser aangebeid
word moet bygewoon en gedokumenteer word. ‘n Geskrewe rekord van die ligging van die
praktyk en betrokke spesialisering moet bygehou word. Beleidsvoorskrifte wat verband
hou met gesondheid en veiligheid, hygiene en sterilisasie moet in die tradisionele
gesondheidgeneserspraktyk geïmplementeer word. Opleiding in pasiëntkonfidensialiteit
moet aangeleer en toegepas word. Samewerking en werkswinkels tussen moderne
mediese dokters en tradisionele gesondheidgenesers moet geïmplementeer en ontwikkel
word. Mediese wetenskapsinligting en tegnologie moet aan tradisionele genesers bekendgemaak
word. Voorts moet ‘n voortgesette professionele ontwikkelingsprogram (POP) aan
alle gesondheidswerkers voorgeskryf word. Dit blyk wenslik te wees om tradisionele
hospitale tot stand te bring waar die bestek van praktyk gedefinieer word. Sulke hospitale
kan dien as plekke waar pasiënte aansterk en geestelike onderskraging geniet. ‘n Etiese
kode en standaard vir professionele etiek moet geskep word vir tradisionele genesers.
Gesondheids- en sekureitsregulasies moet van toepassing wees en geïmplementeer word.
Pasiënte moet ingelig word oor die wegdoen van mites en fabels. Daardeur kan die
positiewe sy van tradisionele medisyne (byvoorbeeld mediese voordele van kruie), en
uitroei van “kwakke” (byvoorbeeld dra van gelukbringers om die lywe), verdryf word.
Dit sal die aanmoediging van ‘n gesonder, sekuriteitbewuste en deursigtige
gesondheidsorg sisteem bewerkstellig in Suid-Afrika waar alle dissiplines van medisyne
saam bestaan in die Nasionale Gesondheidsorgsisteem.
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Tsenguluso ya ndeme ya u thuswa ha nwana nga ndila ya TshivendaMahwasane, Mutshinyani Mercy January 2012 (has links)
Thesis (MA. (African Languages)) -- University of Limpopo, 2012 / Ngudo ino yo sengulusa ndeme ya u thusa ṅwana ho sedzwa nḓila ya Tshivenḓa, sa izwi maitele aya a tshi khou ngalangala musalauno. Ngudo iyi yo sumbedza uri u thusiwa hu kha ḓi vha hone naho mathusele a hone o fhambana, sa izwi zwi tshi bva kha thendelano ya muṱa. Ho wanala uri kha muthuso hu shumiswa vhathu vhofhambanaho u fana na vhomaine, vhakegulu, vhafunzi kana ha tou rengwa mishonga ine ya shumiswa kha u thusa ṅwana. Ngudo yo dovha ya sumbedza mvelelo mmbi dza u sa thusa ṅwana na mvelelo mbuya dza u thusa ṅwana.
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Experiences of female traditional healers on their practice at Makhado Municipality of the Vhembe District of Limpopo ProvinceRambau, Musiiwa Ivy 18 September 2017 (has links)
MA (Psychology) / Department of Psychology / See the attached abstract below
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An Analysis of Current Healing Practices Based on Selected Mega-Churches in the Vhembe District of Limpopo ProvinceMabuza, Lethabo Stanley 18 May 2018 (has links)
MAAS / Centre for African Studies / Healing practices and health related rituals play a vital role in most religious groups including African Traditional Religion, Christianity, Islamic and Hinduism. This phenomenon of healing has been a challenge to religious institutions as well as African based churches. This study examined and analysed the healing practices within mega-churches in relation to the health related aspects. It appears that healing practices performed in those churches make them popular and enhance their growth in membership numerically. The study focuses on the philosophy and theological understanding of both mega-churches and mainstream churches. It is ostensible that healing, as a phenomenon, cannot be separated from core African culture, values and practices. Current church healing practices seems to be a more practical and accessible alternative way to deal with sickness as medical facilities has become inexorably costly especially to poor community who have no access to efficient medical amenities. Underprivileged members of society are drawn to religious healing practices because healers such as prophets, pastors and apostles dangle the capacity to heal people from all kind of ailments. Poor communities become a target because they are victims of government and the department of health malfunctions which are depicted by the poor and below standard medical services in those underprivileged communities. Most people in those communities believe that the above-mentioned emerging prophets and apostles from mega-churches are anointed and possess special power to heal them as well as to redeem them from life’s harsh realities.
In the context of current healing practices, the researcher discovered that there is a need to probe and analyse the aforesaid practices particularly whereby healing seekers seems to have not receive what they anticipated from those mega-churches. The study exposes inappropriate healing dynamics conceived in the selected mega-churches within African tradition context. This study followed a qualitative approach, in which participants from both mega-churches and mainline churches were interviewed. The study further points out some perceived challenges affecting current healing practices in the selected mega-churches of Vhembe district of Limpopo Province. The study employed Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis strategy to analyse the data for the study. / NRF
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Traditional healing modalities in the provision of mental illness in Vhembe, Limpopo ProvinceNevhudoli, Nyadzani Dolphus 18 May 2018 (has links)
MAAS / Centre for African Studies / The study sought to explore the use of traditional healing modalities in the provision of mental illness in the Vhembe district of Limpopo province. Traditional medicine has been used for thousands of years by indigenous people in South Africa and Africa as a whole, and demonstrated efficacy in treating a wide range of health issue. Many of the medicines in contemporary biomedical treatment are derived from plants and herbs used by indigenous people throughout the world. The objectives of the study were to describe the profile of the clients that visit the traditional healers, to explain traditional healers’ diagnostic strategies of mental illness, to explain the traditional healing treatment modalities in the treatment of various forms of mental illness and to discuss traditional healers’ prevention methods of mental illness. The study was guided by indigenous theory of health and illness as a theoretical framework, and for supporting the literature, a theory of African perspective theory was used. A qualitative research approach was used in order to have an in-depth understanding of the modalities of traditional healing in the provision of mental health care. Case study approach was used. Participants were selected purposively around Vhembe district in Limpopo province and snowball sampling technique was applied in order to identify and recruit relevant participants. The researcher conducted semi -structured interviews to gather the relevant data. Data analysis was based on the interpretative philosophy that aimed at examining meaning and symbolic content of qualitative data. Thematic analysis method was employed. The findings of the study confirmed that traditional healing is still widely used in the communities in the provision of mental illness and that there are a variety of diagnostic, treatment and prevention methods in the provision of mental illness. The findings also show that as much as there are challenges facing traditional healing in treatment of mental illness, there is a need to introduce their modalities in the healthcare system of South Africa, Africa and the whole world. Programs that aim to educate the communities about traditional healing modalities should also be established by the Department of Health and the relevant stakeholders such as traditional healers’ organizations. / NRF
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