Quinlan Marsha B, Quinlan Robert J
Department of Anthropology, Washington State University, USA.
Med Anthropol Q. 2007 Jun;21(2):169-92. doi: 10.1525/maq.2007.21.2.169.
Herbal medicine is the first response to illness in rural Dominica. Every adult knows several "bush" medicines, and knowledge varies from person to person. Anthropological convention suggests that modernization generally weakens traditional knowledge. We examine the effects of commercial occupation, consumerism, education, parenthood, age, and gender on the number of medicinal plants freelisted by individuals. All six predictors are associated with bush medical knowledge in bivariate analyses. Contrary to predictions, commercial occupation and consumerism are positively associated with herbal knowledge. Gender, age, occupation, and education are significant predictors in multivariate analysis. Women tend to recall more plants than do men. Education is negatively associated with plants listed; age positively associates with number of species listed. There are significant interactions among commercial occupation, education, age, and parenthood, suggesting that modernization has complex effects on knowledge of traditional medicine in Dominica.
草药是多米尼克农村地区应对疾病的首选。每个成年人都知道几种“丛林”药物,而且知识因个人而异。人类学惯例表明,现代化通常会削弱传统知识。我们研究了商业职业、消费主义、教育、为人父母、年龄和性别对个人自由列举的药用植物数量的影响。在双变量分析中,所有这六个预测因素都与丛林医学知识相关。与预测相反,商业职业和消费主义与草药知识呈正相关。在多变量分析中,性别、年龄、职业和教育是重要的预测因素。女性往往比男性能回忆起更多的植物。教育与列举的植物呈负相关;年龄与列举的物种数量呈正相关。商业职业、教育、年龄和为人父母之间存在显著的相互作用,这表明现代化对多米尼克传统医学知识有复杂的影响。