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As Caribbean communities become more international, clinicians and
scholars must develop new paradigms for understanding treatment
preferences and perceptions of illness. Despite evidence supporting
the need for culturally appropriate care and the integration of
traditional healing practices into conventional health and mental
health care systems, it is unclear how such integration would
function since little is known about the therapeutic interventions
of Caribbean healing traditions. Caribbean Healing Traditions:
Implications for Health and Mental Health fills this gap. Drawing
on the knowledge of prominent clinicians, scholars, and researchers
of the Caribbean and the diaspora, these healing traditions are
explored in the context of health and mental health for the first
time, making Caribbean Healing Traditions an invaluable resource
for students, researchers, faculty, and practitioners in the fields
of nursing, counseling, psychotherapy, psychiatry, social work,
youth and community development, and medicine.
By focussing on the worldview of Jamaican and other Caribbean
peoples, this collection of essays explores the themes of cultural
continuity and change between the Rastafari, on the one hand, and
Revival, Ndyuka and Winti religions, on the other. A wide range of
topics are covered: continuity between Rastafari and Revival, the
origin and symbolism of the dreadlocks, the process of Rastafari
integration into British society, the Gaan Gadu cult, home rituals,
and the theoretical problems of African retention in the Caribbean.
As Caribbean communities become more international, clinicians and
scholars must develop new paradigms for understanding treatment
preferences and perceptions of illness. Despite evidence supporting
the need for culturally appropriate care and the integration of
traditional healing practices into conventional health and mental
health care systems, it is unclear how such integration would
function since little is known about the therapeutic interventions
of Caribbean healing traditions. Caribbean Healing Traditions:
Implications for Health and Mental Health fills this gap. Drawing
on the knowledge of prominent clinicians, scholars, and researchers
of the Caribbean and the diaspora, these healing traditions are
explored in the context of health and mental health for the first
time, making Caribbean Healing Traditions an invaluable resource
for students, researchers, faculty, and practitioners in the fields
of nursing, counseling, psychotherapy, psychiatry, social work,
youth and community development, and medicine.
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