Li S X, Phillips M R
Shashi Psychiatric Hospital, Shashi, Hubei, People's Republic of China.
Am J Psychiatry. 1990 Feb;147(2):221-4. doi: 10.1176/ajp.147.2.221.
This study, the first report on witch doctors in the People's Republic of China, found that most witch doctors are poorly educated peasants who perform healing rituals as a part-time occupation. Despite being officially illegal, folk healing practices are flourishing in the countryside: 73.9% (N = 286 of 387) of psychiatric outpatients from rural areas and 70.5% (N = 43 of 61) of mentally ill persons identified in a rural community admitted to consulting witch doctors. These findings indicate an urgent need to systematically assess the beneficial and detrimental effects of these practices on China's health care system.
本研究是关于中华人民共和国巫医的首份报告,发现多数巫医是受教育程度低的农民,他们将施行治疗仪式作为兼职。尽管民间治疗行为在官方层面是非法的,但在农村地区却很盛行:来自农村地区的73.9%(387例中的286例)精神科门诊患者以及在一个农村社区识别出的70.5%(61例中的43例)精神病患者承认咨询过巫医。这些发现表明迫切需要系统评估这些行为对中国医疗体系的利弊影响。