“Hidden” popular illnesses in primary care: Residents' recognition and clinical implications
- 1 September 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry
- Vol. 9 (3) , 223-240
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00048499
Abstract
This study documents that ethnomedical beliefs and practices play an important role in primary care in a southern community. Thirty-three of 73 patients from a rural Appalachian area coming to a university primary care internal medicine practice presented 54 ethnomedical complaints such as “high blood” (24.1%), “Weak 'n dizzy” (22.2%), “nerves” (16.7%), “sugar” (5.6%) and “fallin' out” (3.7%). Thirty-three patients had both biomedical and ethnomedical complaints, 40 patients had biomedical complaints without ethnomedical complaints and no patients presented with ethnomedical complaints alone. Over two-thirds of all patients consulted non-medical personnel for their complaints, mostly family and friends, and 70 percent self-treated prior to clinic consultation. Patients presenting with ethnomedical complaints when compared with those presenting with biomedical complaints sought advice of non-physicians significantly more often (p < 0.02); no statistical difference, however, was found in their self-treatment practices. Ninety-two of 130 biomedical complaints were recorded by the patient's physician but none of the 54 ethnomedical complaints were formally recorded (p < 0.001). The high incidence of ethnomedical complaints in this population and the failure of physicians to recognize these complaints demand that primary care medicine residents be taught improved history-taking skills and the essentials of ethnomedical illnesses if they are to provide culturally-sensitive patient care. [ethnomedicine; physician education; Southern black and white Appalachian folk medicine; culturally-appropriate primary care.]Keywords
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