“Making sense” about diabetes: Dakota narratives of illness
- 1 June 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Medical Anthropology
- Vol. 11 (3) , 305-327
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01459740.1989.9966000
Abstract
Diabetes, as it has increasingly affected Dakota (Sioux) in a North Dakota community, is deliberated upon by patients in commentaries that range beyond the more familiar biomedical “boundaries” of a given health condition. These commentaries—or “narrative reconstructions"— following Williams and Wood's (1986) considerations of patients “making sense” of illness and the disruption it may cause, touch upon larger concerns of Dakota regarding culture history and identity. While individuals’ interpretations regarding etiology, illness experience, and efficacy of treatments vary, diabetes emerges as a symbol that conveys meaning at many levels. That diabetes treatment may impinge on customary foodways makes imagery of diabetes perhaps more salient. Health workers, trained within the “culture of biomedicine” (Hagey 1984), may learn to recognize key elements in such narratives for cooperative efforts in diabetes education and treatment.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nutrition UpdateThe Diabetes Educator, 1988
- Dietary change and plasma glucose levels in an Amerindian population undergoing cultural transitionSocial Science & Medicine, 1987
- Cultural Challenges in Nutrition Education Among American IndiansThe Diabetes Educator, 1987
- COMMON-SENSE BELIEFS ABOUT ILLNESS: A MEDIATING ROLE FOR THE DOCTORThe Lancet, 1986
- The phenomenon, the explanations and the responses: Metaphors surrounding diabetes in urban Canadian IndiansSocial Science & Medicine, 1984
- The genesis of chronic illness: narrative re‐constructionSociology of Health & Illness, 1984
- Diabetes mellitus in the Pima Indians: Genetic and evolutionary considerationsAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1983
- The Anthropologies of Illness and SicknessAnnual Review of Anthropology, 1982
- Lakota Belief and RitualAmerican Indian Quarterly, 1979
- Part two: Diabetes, culture change, and acculturation: A biocultural analysis1Medical Anthropology, 1977