Traditional Healers & Mental Health Services (10th November 2010 / London Conference)
novembre 5th, 2010
Many people do not seek help from their GP or via their local mental health services when they become unwell for a number of different reasons. Some people seek advice and support via traditional healers, preferring possibly to enter into a therapeutic dialogue with someone who is from the same culture or who understands their cultural perspective and can facilitate some form of cultural re-integration. The reasons why people seek help from traditional healers vary. Outside the biomedical model the mind / body dichotomy is less evident. The “idiom/s of distress” individuals present with may not be as compartmentalised as they are in the medical model.
Traditional healing is practised in many countries across the world. Healers use a number of interventions to heal people including; recitation of specific prayers, fasting, the wearing of amulets, the chanting of specific music, meditation, the making of sacrifices, conducting exorcism ceremonies and the ingestion of medicines and potions. In the UK some people receiving care from their local mental health services will have also sought out and may well be receiving care simultaneously from a traditional healer. However, the extent to which this manner of help seeking behaviour and the healing interventions they have received are acknowledged or discussed with the service user by mental health professionals working within the biomedical model, varies.
Many people, including mental health professionals are dismissive of traditional healers and their practices, citing a lack of evidence base to prove the effectiveness of healing interventions or their concerns about the amount of money some healers charge. However, there are those who are interested in finding out more about healers and their practices. The extent to which mental health professionals are able to collaborate and / or work jointly with healers remains unclear. We know of very few examples where this is the case in the UK.
• Why do people seek help from a healer? What kinds of problems do they present with?
• How do healers make a “diagnosis”?
• What do healers do? Healing and healing practices
• What evidence exists about the effectiveness of healing interventions?
• What are the benefits and risks of mental health professionals and others working collaboratively with traditional healers?
Some of the key questions which will be discussed during the one day event include:• Should and can psychiatrists and traditional healers work together? What possible problems might arise? What might be the benefits or risks for the service user?• Should we be extending service models to include traditional healers?
• Do service users find the support they receive from traditional healers helpful?
• What can mental health professionals learn from traditional healers and vice versa?
Programme of the day
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email us on: info at bmehealth.org