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583 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 6 (2002)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0583 and id is 1 raw text is: PREFACE

Each society has explanations, institutions, healers, and therapies that
constitute a system enabling its members to cope with health and illness.
Multiple terms are used to describe these medical systems. The term tradi-
tional, widely used in medical anthropological and related literature, refers
to the myriad medical systems and practices found in Africa, Asia, and Latin
America. Many of these systems, especially in Africa and Latin America, are
based on oral knowledge transmitted from one healer to another and more
properly fall into the category of folk medicine. It should be noted, however,
that in Western societies, various forms of folk medicine, such as home reme-
dies, still play an important role in perceptions of health and illness. In Asia,
especially in China and India, the medical systems are part of the classical
written heritage of these ancient civilizations. Indigenous is another term
used to describe local, native medical systems. In some cases, such as Unani
medicine and homeopathy in India, long history and interaction with other
medical systems, such as Ayurveda in India, have led to their being consid-
ered indigenous Indian medical systems.
For societies throughout the world, a variety of medical systems interact
with one another. Patients patronize the various systems, practitioners incor-
porate therapies and diagnoses of other traditions into their own, and defini-
tions of and beliefs about health and illness spill over from one system to
another. Therefore, the health care system is a complex one, composed of indi-
vidual systems quite independent in their makeup yet interdependent
because of shared components. The extent of the interpenetration of elements
(e.g., therapies) from one system to another varies; whether the various sys-
tems acknowledge or accept interaction is another issue. The reality is that
all of these systems provide medical care, are patronized, and may share some
if not all elements with the coexisting medical systems.
A review of the literature on alternative medicine reveals that since the
1960s-when alternative medicine was the folk or traditional medicine of
other societies across the globe or was that used with or in place of biomedical
traditions in Western societies-studies of the use of complementary and
alternative medicine (CAM), especially in American society, have grown in
number. Understandably, the concept of alternative (replacing a biomedical
treatment) is far more adversarial than that of complementary (used along-
side a biomedical treatment). In the biomedical community, predominant con-
cerns about CAM from the 1960s into the 1980s centered on unproven meth-
ods of treatment for cancer, arthritis, and other chronic conditions. The stance
of the medical profession, professional associations, and disease-specific
research and service organizations (such as the American Cancer Society and
the American Arthritis Association) was adversarial, identifying alternative
medical practitioners as quacks and their lay supporters and users as propo-
nents. Quackery and fraudulent methods were considered potentially life

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