Malaria: Ethnomedical perceptions and practice in an Adangbe farming community and implications for control
References (21)
- et al.
Medical pluralism and homeopathy: a geographic perspective
Soc. Sci. Med.
(1980) Medical pluralism in world perspective
Soc. Sci. Med.
(1980)The relevance of traditional medicine cultures to modern primary health care
Soc. Sci. Med.
(1983)- et al.
The indigenization of pharmaceuticals: therapeutic transitions in rural Hausaland
Soc. Sci. Med.
(1990) Summary—Malaria control activities in the last 40 years
Wld Hlth Statis. Q.
(1988)Essential Malariology
Man's Mastery of Malaria
(1955)The Conquest of Malaria
(1950)Essential Malariology
Malaria and the work of WHO
Bull. Wld Hlth Org.
(1989)
Cited by (133)
The ethnopharmacological literature: An analysis of the scientific landscape
2020, Journal of EthnopharmacologyCitation Excerpt :(3) Phytochemical “screening” (n = 153; CPP = 51.4) and “isolation” (n = 170; CPP = 36.1) of natural products from plant species, such as from Congolese (Tona et al., 1998) and Brazilian (Alves et al., 2000) medicinal plants, as well as investigations into the differences in various extraction methods for the screening and isolation of natural products (Eloff, 1998). (4) One new research focus during this period was the potential relevance of “treatment” (n = 647; CPP = 40.7) by natural products/medicinal plants for various “diseases” (n = 354; CPP = 45.3), mainly in association with “cancer” (n = 53; CPP = 69.3) (Graham et al., 2000; Pettit et al., 1995; Surh, 1999) and malaria (n = 54; CPP = 41.4) (Agyepong, 1992; Carvalho et al., 1991), and some other examples including Alzheimer's disease (Perry et al., 1999) and atopic eczema (Sheehan and Atherton, 1992). When the clustering by VOSviewer was considered, there were 4 clusters, which were related to the use of plant species for traditional medicine (red, 104 terms), the chemical assays and evaluation of activities of plant extracts against bacteria, fungi, microbiota, etc (green, 75 terms), the treatment efficacy and toxicity evaluation using animal and cell models (blue, 60 terms), and the various parts of plants used, such as seed, leaf, and shoot (grey, 24 terms) (Fig. 3B).
Encountering Illness: Local Knowledge, Institutions and the Science of Healthcare Practices among the Chuktia Bhunjia Tribe of Odisha, India
2023, Journal of Asian and African StudiesFake malaria and hidden parasites—the ambiguity of malaria
2023, Medical AnthropologyAre malaria risk factors based on gender? A mixed-methods survey in an urban setting in ghana
2021, Tropical Medicine and Infectious DiseaseKnowledge and practices about malaria in two tribal dominated regions of Madhya Pradesh, India
2021, Journal of Communicable Diseases