| Publication Type | Book Chapter | |
| Authors | Melissa Ceuterick; Ina Vandebroek; Bren Torry; Andrea Pieroni | |
| Year of Publication | 2007 | |
| Editor | Andrea Pieroni; Ina Vandebroek | |
| Book Title | Traveling Cultures and Plants: The Ethnobiology and Ethnopharmacy of Migrations | |
| City | Oxford | |
| Publisher | Berghahn Books | |
| Pages | 145-165 | |
| Language | English | |
| Key Words | acculturation; demedicalization; disease; home remedies; Latino immigrants; London; medical anthropology | |
| Notes | Anthropological studies among Latinos in London are rare, and the research discussed in this chapter sheds light on the plant-based health care practices of this particular group of urban immigrants. During nine months of fieldwork from September 2005 to May 2006, the researchers interviewed a sample population in order to explore the ways that their plant use has changed while living in the London metropolitan area as compared to how it was in their country of origin. Though the immigrants come from various Spanish-speaking countries, a self-representational pan-Latino identity unites them as one general, yet not officially recognized, ethnic group in the British context. The chapter includes an ethnographic background accounting for this. Qualitative research methods were used to gather data from thirty-five informants, mostly from Andean countries. Along with participant observation, interviewing was the main research method and included open-ended interviews, semi-structured interviewsi, casual conversations and group interviews. The study zone's principal Latino herbal shop was visited repeatedly and a complete inventory of its herbs was recorded and samples of each herb were taken. The researchers identified the samples using a collection of books and reference literature. Significant emic distinctions between the terms disease, illness and discomfort, and the categories of remedies informants sought for each, were discovered. Medical anthropology theories on demedicalization of certain disorders are discussed to explain corresponding health care strategies. Some of these cultural distinctions make the UK's National Health Service (NHS) incompatible with Latino needs. Also, many of these immigrants are undocumented and unable to benefit from the NHS. Citing theoretical health care models, the authors propose that Latinos in London have the choice to seek treatment in three different arenas: the professional biomedical sector, the folk/specialist sector and the popular/lay sector. This research highlights the popular sector, which is mainly characterized by self-treatment. The authors divide the plant-based home remedies that their informants mentioned into four categories: (1) medicinal herbs; (2) food-medicine continuum; (3) ritual; and (4) cosmetic. In comparison to the plants that informants said they used in their home country, the quantity and diversity of home remedies they used in the UK is far less – in total, 196 remedies in the former and 66 in the latter. Most of the latter come from globalized, non-Latin American species. The authors discuss processes of acculturation and note that assimilation to highly culturally heterogeneous urban environments is a contradiction in terms. Here, acculturation in relationship to home remedy use is seen to be guided by practical choices and limitations, rather than negotiations of ethnic identity. Constraints pertaining to linguistics, busy schedules, work and age affect plant remedy use, but the main factor limiting diversity of plant remedy use was found to be the UK's harsh importation laws that prohibit immigrants from accessing many of their traditional herbs. Prepared by Megan Glore |
| Publication Type | Book Chapter | |
| Authors | Usha R. Palaniswamy | |
| Year of Publication | 2007 | |
| Editor | Andrea Pieroni; Ina Vandebroek | |
| Book Title | Traveling Cultures and Plants: The Ethnobiology and Ethnopharmacy of Migrations | |
| City | Oxford | |
| Publisher | Berghahn Books | |
| Pages | 148-178 | |
| Chapter | 4 | |
| Language | English | |
| Key Words | acculturation; Asian Indians; diabetes; disease prevention; migrants; traditional diet; United States | |
| Notes | In response to the rapidly increasing amount of Asian Indian immigrants (people born in or originating from India) to the US and their high predisposition to diabetes, Palaniswamy's study presents a case for tailoring diabetes prevention programs more specifically to this ethnic group. Drawing from other studies that show decreasing levels of health after Asian Indians migrate to the UK or Canada, she investigated the dietary changes that these immigrants in the US undergo, and explored their awareness about diabetes and the factors influencing their risk of developing the disease. Data was obtained through a questionnaire that was issued to 144 female residents of Connecticut under 45 years of age. There was an equal number of participants from each of the following categories of US residency: (1) less than 5 years, (2) 5 – 10 years, (3) more than 10 years, (4) born and raised in the US, and (5) White mainstream. Forty-nine questions tested for data on demographics, acculturation level, knowledge of risk factors, barriers to following preventative practices, confidence and health motivation, and dietary modifications after migration. Palaniswamy used the SAS General Linear Models system to analyze her data. Results show that acculturation levels progressed along with the amount of time residing in the U.S., but no immigrant was classified as either completely traditional or assimilated. Participants who had lived longer in the US had more knowledge about diabetes risk factors and higher confidence and health motivation for preventing diabetes. They also experienced less barriers to adopting preventative health practices. However, compared to White mainstream participants, immigrant knowledge, confidence and motivation were lower and they experienced more prevention barriers in every case. While acculturation occurred in parallel to diminishing adherence to healthy traditional Indian diets, the author does not consider acculturation to significantly affect participants' motivation to care for their health. Data showed that the participants were unaware of the health benefits of their traditional diet as well as the health threats inherent to their Western dietary transition. Also, traditional diet ingredients were found to be largely unavailable in local stores. It is concluded that health promotion and diabetes prevention programs for Asian Indian immigrants should teach about the benefits of traditional diets. Due to the participants' adequate levels of motivation for healthy living, the author recommends the incorporation of this educational focus into the design of health outreach programs that empower participants to make more informed dietary decisions. Moreover, she urges that programs should take into account the variable acculturation levels and linguistic, cultural, genetic and socioeconomic characteristics of the target immigrant population. Prepared by Megan Glore |
| Publication Type | Book Chapter | |
| Authors | Andreana L. Ososki; Michael J. Balick; Douglas C. Daly | |
| Year of Publication | 2007 | |
| Editor | Andrea Pieroni; Ina Vandebroek | |
| Book Title | Traveling Cultures and Plants: The Ethnobiology and Ethnopharmacy of Migrations | |
| City | Oxford | |
| Publisher | Berghahn Books | |
| Pages | 14-38 | |
| Chapter | 1 | |
| Language | English | |
| Key Words | Dominican Republic; medicinal plant knowledge; New York City; rural; transnational; urban | |
| Notes | Citing its importance to health care initiatives and conservation efforts, Ososki, Balick, and Daly compared the medicinal plant knowledge among Dominicans living in New York City (NYC) and in their home country, as well as that of rural and urban inhabitants of the Dominican Republic (DR). Their work shows the variation in such knowledge that can exist among a single given ethnic group across different geographic locations. The NYC data was gathered during the ongoing Urban Ethnobotany Project begun in 1996, and fieldwork in the DR took place from September 2000 to August 2001. In NYC, multiple patients of six different Dominican healers were interviewed on numerous occasions about their female health conditions. Relevant medicinal plant samples were collected from local NYC herbal shops. A comparative literature review on Dominican plants for women's health conditions pointed up the need for further research on ten particular women's conditions to be conducted in the DR itself. There, research with 11 healers provided a data set for transnational comparison. In addition, 226 women in two rural settings and two cities of the DR were surveyed to elucidate variation among rural and urban knowledge holders. Prior informed consent was obtained and semi-structured interviewsi yielded sociodemographic and socioeconomic data and free-lists of medicinal plants in general and plants used for the health conditions central to the inquiry. Detailed information was elicited about the remedies. Within the DR, rural women named a greater number of medicinal plant species than urban women. Also, it was found that a greater percentage of rural women reported plant-based remedies for the ten health conditions than urban women, in all cases but one. Uterine fibroids was the only condition that urban women in the DR and in NYC had more knowledge for how to treat with plants; the chapter discusses this finding in greater detail. While there were only three common conditions featured as part of the research question on remedies in both countries, for two out of the three conditions, healers in the DR could name at least four times as many medicinal plant species for treatment than their NYC counterparts. Closer contact with nature and high costs of transportation and medicine are thought to be factors leading to rural women's greater reliance on plants for health care. For urban women, higher access to biomedicine and educational and social pressures are hypothesized to diminish the role of plant medicine in their lives. Nevertheless, this research shows that natural health care knowledge is still transmitted and utilized in urban and transnational settings. Prepared by Megan Glore |
| Publication Type | Book Chapter | |
| Authors | Andrea Pieroni; Ina Vandebroek | |
| Year of Publication | 2007 | |
| Editor | Andrea Pieroni; Ina Vandebroek | |
| Book Title | Traveling Cultures and Plants: The Ethnobiology and Ethnopharmacy of Migrations | |
| City | Oxford | |
| Publisher | Berghahn Books | |
| Pages | 1-13 | |
| Chapter | Intro | |
| Language | English | |
| Key Words | acculturation; biocultural adaptation; cultural negotiation; emic; etic; identity; immigrants; transcultural health studies; urban ethnobotany | |
| Notes | Reflective of the accelerated pace of globalization and rural-urban migration today, urban ethnobotany is a rapidly expanding field of study. Pieroni and Vandebroek, as editors and contributors, have published a compilation of urban ethnobotany and transcultural health studies, and the introduction that they co-authored outlines important issues encompassed by these two overlapping disciplines. The book’s twelve case studies, each authored by experienced researchers, demonstrate a diversity of approaches and research questions for studying the plants that national and transnational migrants use for food, medicine, well-being and identity in metropolitan areas of the industrialized world. Past and present contexts of the interaction between people and plants are explored and used in the analysis of transnational movements, urban living, health and health care and biocultural adaptation. Brief descriptions of each of the book’s chapters are provided. Three chapters investigate plant remedies used by Latino immigrants in New York City. One chapter addresses health issues surrounding diabetes for Asians in the United States, and another author researched medicinal plant use by Thai women in Sweden. The effects of differing regulations for plant importation in host countries are shown to affect the ethnomedical practices of Surinamese immigrants in Amsterdam and of Latino immigrants in London. Plant foods are found to be significant aspects of the politico-historical ethnic identity amongst Kurdish people in London, and the use of khat by Somali UK immigrants is investigated in light of its contemporary demonization by Western culture. The final three chapters look into plant use in the contexts of historical migrations in northern Europe, Albanians in southern Italy, and refugee camps in Algeria. The editors identify four key scientific questions that warrant systematic investigation by researchers: 1) Do migrants continue to adhere to their traditional plant use strategies, and if so, why? 2) How does the new urban context affect their health care-seeking strategies and their newly-situated cultural, social, environmental and political identities? 3) How do migrant health care practices and host population medical systems interact? and 4) What is the awareness of host country health workers and institutions about migrant health strategies? In the interest of providing more culturally appropriate health care services for ethnically diverse populations, such research can help heath workers understand immigrants' perceptions, beliefs and practices surrounding their well-being. More emic-oriented approaches to immigrant health care programs could hence be incorporated to institutional strategies. Processes of acculturation and adaptation are pointed to as integral to anthropological discourse on migrant studies. Importantly, the editors stress that “adaptation does not represent a sort of ‘destiny’” (p.4). Today’s state of the art of these concepts instead recognizes a kind of cultural negotiation, whereby immigrants constantly interact with a diverse range of choices and influences in heterogeneous urban settings. Whether immigrants are strengthening their ethnic identities or adapting to the host culture, the ways that they use and represent plants are concurrently transformed, producing dynamic outcomes for their traditional knowledge, beliefs and practices. Prepared by Megan Glore |
| Publication Type | Journal Article | |
| Authors | Andrea Pieroni; Harald Muenz; Minire Akbulut; Kemal Husnu Can Baser; Cenk Durmuskahya | |
| Journal Title | Journal of Ethnopharmacology | |
| Year of Publication | 2005 | |
| Volume | 102 | |
| Pages | 69 - 88 | |
| Key Words | decontextualization; ethnobotany; ethnopharmacy; indigenization; medicinal foods; medicinal plants; migrants; Turkey; Germany | |
| Notes | Pieroni et al. investigated the use of traditional Turkish folk medicine and changes in materia medica amongst first generation Turkish migrants living in the urban environment of Cologne, Germany. Field research conducted over a 24-week period in 2003 and 2004 consisted of interviewing and holding focus groups of randomly selected Turkish participants about their use of traditional remedies. The authors obtained prior informed consent from survey participants and followed ethical guidelines established by the American Anthropological Association and the International Society of Ethnobiology. They collected voucher specimens of relevant dried and fresh plant material and identified them with the assistance of Turkish botanists. The researchers then compared field data with literature on traditional Turkish phytotherapy and evidence-based clinical German phytotherapy. Apart from presenting a table outlining the data on 79 botanical taxa, 115 plant-based preparations and 167 phytotherapeutical uses and selected animal and mineral remedies named in the interviews, the article provides additional detail about three interesting plant remedies: aerial parts of Sideritis species, Pistacia terebinthus fruits and Peganum harmala fruits and seeds. Analysis of the results revealed that (1) a quarter of the treatments consisted of 'medicinal food'; (2) women were more knowledgeable than men about plant uses, and (3) most of the material for the traditional medicine was imported to Germany through 'unofficial' means or bought in Turkish shops in Cologne. Local cultivation and wild harvest of the plants in Germany were very minimal, but most survey participants gathered wild herbs or bought them in markets in Turkey. This challenges assumptions about how migrants source material for food and medicine. Only one third of the phytotherapeutical uses reported had been previously recorded in ethnobotanical research conducted in Turkey, and only 9% of the medicinal uses reported in this study had been acknowledged by the modern school of German phytotherapy. Although the researchers comment on the importance of understanding the cultural significance of plants, they limit their analysis to the frequency of mention of a remedy. The assimilation process of the migrants in their host country is discussed along with the indigenization and de-contexualization of German phytotherapy as it is incorporated in novel ways into the Turkish migrants' materia medica. This research points to the need for more investigation into the effects of simultaneous use of traditional and conventional medicines among migrants, and to the mutual transmission of ethnopharmaceutical knowledge between migrants and host country populations. Prepared by Megan Glore, edited by Gary Martin | |
| URL | http://www.andreapieroni.eu/Pieroni%20et%20al.,%202005b.pdf |
| Publication Type | Journal Article | |
| Authors | Marian Reiff; Bonnie O'Connor; Fredi Kronenberg; Michael Balick; Patricia Lohr; Maria Roble; Adriane Fugh-Berman; Kimberly D. Johnson | |
| Journal Title | Human Organization | |
| Year of Publication | 2003 | |
| Volume | 62 | |
| Issue | 1 | |
| Pages | 12 - 26 | |
| Notes | This article describes the results of interviews with female Dominican immigrants practicing traditional medicine in New York City. In addition to reporting comparisons of the varying backgrounds of the folk healers and their individual perspectives, ethnomedical concepts and practices, such as diagnostics, etiologies, and prescriptions for treating female health problems, are explored. The researchers developed new methods for investigating ethnomedical concepts of illness while concurrently working within a framework of biomedical diagnostic categories. Such research is important because of the large and growing amount of people in urban centers (immigrants, ethnic minorities and mainstream population) that use alternative medicine while also using conventional biomedicine. The authors suggest that conventional health care schemes could be improved by knowledge of the effects of biomedical drug and traditional herbal remedy synergies, familiarity with the diversity of cultural beliefs surrounding health care, and the creation of complementary roles for traditional healers. |