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View Review Health, Healing, and Religion: A Cross-Cultural Perspective AudioBook by Kinsley, David R. (Paperback)

Health, Healing, and Religion: A Cross-Cultural Perspective
TitleHealth, Healing, and Religion: A Cross-Cultural Perspective
Run Time53 min 43 seconds
File Namehealth-healing-and-r_KpYiy.pdf
health-healing-and-r_ADnGO.aac
GradeAAC 96 kHz
Released3 years 4 months 30 days ago
File Size1,049 KB
Number of Pages212 Pages

Health, Healing, and Religion: A Cross-Cultural Perspective

Category: Teen & Young Adult, Romance
Author: Chrissie Rucker
Publisher: Philip Pullman
Published: 2018-01-18
Writer: Cori Doerrfeld
Language: Finnish, Romanian, Arabic
Format: Audible Audiobook, Kindle Edition
Health, Healing and Religion: A Cross Cultural Perspective ... - Explicitly dealing with the religious aspects of healing and healers, this unique and intriguing book examines illness, healing, and religion in cross-cultural perspective by looking at how sickness is understood and treated in a wide variety of cultures.
Medical Humanities Minor Requirements - ... required: 18. The Medical Humanities minor may be declared in WebSTAC as early as the spring semester of a student's freshman year. ... Religion and Healing (PHR) Religion ... The Female Life-Cycle in Cross-Cultural Perspective Gender ...
Cross-cultural perspectives on hypnotic-like procedures used by native healing practitioners. - The author concentrates on describing the hypnotic-like aspects of native healing procedures, only incidentally making interpretive analyses of the procedures themselves from the standpoint of Western medicine and psychotherapy. Most illnesses in a society are socially constructed, at least in part. Alleged changes in consciousness reflect social construction. Because native models of healing generally assume that practitioners, to be effective, must shift their attention and awareness, the hypnosis literature can be instructive. Western hypnotic models are often assumed to represent universal processes; however, native healing procedures are also worthy of appreciation from the perspective of their own social framework. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
Cultural Religious Competence In Clinical Practice - The diversity of religions around the world creates challenges for health care providers and systems to provide culturally competent medical care. Cultural competence is the ability of health providers and organizations to deliver health care services that meet the cultural, social, and religious needs of patients and their families. Culturally competent care can improve patient quality and care outcomes. Strategies to move health professionals and systems towards these goals include providing cultural competence training and developing policies and procedures that decrease barriers to providing culturally competent patient care.[1][2][3][4]
Review - David Kinsley, Health, healing, and religion: A cross-cultural perspective. Upper. Saddle River Prentice Hall, 1996. xi + 212 pp. This ambitious work provides the ...
Health, healing, and religion : a cross-cultural perspective | Semantic Scholar - Explicitly dealing with the religious aspects of healing and healers, this unique and intriguing book examines illness, healing, and religion in cross-cultural perspective by looking at how sickness is understood and treated in a wide variety of cultures. Centered around three principle themes, the text: A) illustrates how crucial it is to frame illness in a meaningful context in every culture and how this process is almost always bound up with religious, spiritual, and moral concerns; B) shows how many beliefs, strategies, and practices that characterize traditional cultures also appear in Christianity, putting healing in the Christian tradition in a broad, rational context, and; C) discusses the continuities between traditional, explicitly religious, and modern medical cultures demonstrating that many features of modern scientific medicine are symbolic and ritualistic, and that many aspects and practices of modern medicine are similar to healing as seen in traditional, pre-scientific medical cultures. For t
Dealing with Patients from Other Cultures - Health care is a complex issue. Cultural and language barriers complicate the situation. Western medicine has developed into a subculture with its own history, language, codes of conduct, expectations, methods, technologies, and concerns about the science which supports it. Science teaches us that human populations are governed by biologic universals that transcend cultural boundaries. The methods and language of biologically based and somatically focused health care have created an extraordinary gulf between practitioners and the public they serve.
Health, Healing, and Religion: A Cross-Cultural Perspective David Kinsley Upper Saddle River, Nj: Prentice Hall, 1996. x + 212 p - John R Williams, 1996 - Health, Healing, and Religion: A Cross-Cultural Perspective David Kinsley Upper Saddle River, Nj: Prentice Hall, 1996. x + 212 p. Show all authors.
Human Diversity - SMU (Southern Methodist University) - ANTH 3301 Health, Healing and Ethics: Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Sickness & Society (CFB 3301 ... ANTH 3366 Magic, Myth, and Religion Across Cultures
Health, Healing and Religion: A Cross Cultural Perspective - Health, Healing and Religion: A Cross Cultural Perspective
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