Implications of healing power and positioning for collaboration between formal mental health services and traditional/alternative medicine: the case of Ghana

Glob Health Action. 2018;11(1):1445333. doi: 10.1080/16549716.2018.1445333.

Abstract

Background: Many current debates about global mental health have increasingly called for collaboration between biomedical and traditional medical health systems. Despite these calls, not much has been written about the variables that would influence such collaboration. To a large extent, collaboration dialogues have considered biomedicine on the one hand, and a wide range of traditional and faith-based treatments on the other hand. However, this dualistic bifurcation does not reflect the plurality of healing systems in operation in many contexts, and the diverse investments that different non-biomedical healing approaches may have in their own power to heal.

Objective: We set out to explore the diversity of different healers' perceptions of power, and the relationship between that power and the perceived power of biomedical approaches.

Methods: Through a qualitative design, and using the case of medical pluralism in urban Ghana as an example, we conducted interviews among different categories of traditional and alternative medicine (TAM) practitioners living and/or working in the Greater Accra Region of Ghana.

Results: Through thematic analyses, differences in the notions about collaboration between the different categories of healers were identified. Their perceptions of whether collaboration would be beneficial seemed, from this study, to co-occur with their perceptions of their own power.

Conclusions: We suggest that an important way to move debates forward about collaboration amongst different sectors is to examine the notions of power and positioning of different categories of TAM healers in relation to biomedicine, and the attendant implications of those notions for integrative mental healthcare.

Keywords: Ghana; collaboration; mental health; power; traditional medicine.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Complementary Therapies / methods*
  • Female
  • Ghana
  • Health Personnel / psychology*
  • Humans
  • Intersectoral Collaboration
  • Male
  • Medicine, Traditional / methods*
  • Mental Disorders / therapy*
  • Mental Health Services / organization & administration*
  • Middle Aged
  • Urban Population / statistics & numerical data*

Grants and funding

The research reported in this paper forms part of the doctoral dissertation of the first author, funded by the Graduate School of the Arts and Social Sciences at Stellenbosch University. Further funding was provided for the second author (LS) by the National Research Foundation (NRF) of South Africa [grant number 85423]. The content is the sole responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of Stellenbosch University or the NRF. Neither the university nor the NRF played any official role in the design of the study, nor the collection, analysis and interpretation of data, nor in writing the manuscript; National Research Foundation [85423]; Stellenbosch University.