Description

Book Synopsis

In the Himalayan Kingdom of Bhutan, medical patients engage a variety of healing practices to seek cures for their ailments. Patients use the expanding biomedical network and a growing number of traditional healthcare units, while also seeking alternative practices, such as shamanism and other religious healing, or even more provocative practices. The Patient Multiple delves into this healthcare complexity in the context of patients’ daily lives and decision-making processes, showing how these unique mountain cultures are finding new paths to good health among a changing and multifaceted medical topography.



Trade Review

“Of considerable interest for academics, The Patient Multiple should be a must-read for medical practitioners working in Bhutan, both citizens and foreigners…Taee does an excellent job of analyzing the distinct ways practitioners in the modern, traditional, and alternative spheres envision and treat patients and their illnesses and how these alternatives in turn resonate with differing notions of ethics, community, and citizenship among other factors.” • Pacific Affairs

“It is a well thought-out book that attempts to place the concept of medical plurality and especially ‘multiplicity’ in a more complex situation in Bhutan today… The book is comprised of five chapters, written in rich ethnographic style and anthropological analyses.” • Newbooks.asia

The Patient Multiple is a refreshing account of healing narratives in a medical plural context. It is a wonderful and insightful read, written in a way that is accessible to a wide audience, blending rich description and grounded analysis. Furthermore, beautiful photographs taken by the author accompany and complement the text. In sum, the book is very well suited for students at both undergraduate and post-graduate levels and is an important contribution for those interested in medical pluralism and the shifting healing landscape in the Himalayan region.” • Medical Anthropology Quarterly

“…the book is clearly structured and includes several photographs that visually underline the ethnographic accounts…[It] offers a welcome contribution to the medical anthropological literature on ‘patient-hood’ and the multiplicity this involves on the ground. With its accessibility and detailed ethnographic examples, it makes a good read for undergraduate courses in medical anthropology and anybody working in or concerned with public health in Asia.” • Anthropos

“This book is a welcome pioneering ethnography based on case studies that demonstrate a clear understanding of the way in which public health care services in Bhutan integrate both biomedical and ’traditional’ medicine.” • Mona Schrempf, Free University, Berlin

“This is a timely and much needed study on the relationship between traditional and modern medicine in Bhutan that is grounded in a rich, nuanced ethnographic study.” • Richard Whitecross, Edinburgh Napier University



Table of Contents

List of Figures
Acronyms
Notes on Language
Dzongkha Reference Guide
Acknowledgements
Map

Introduction

Chapter 1. The Patient Multiple: Cures, Healths and Bodies
Chapter 2. Modernising Traditional Medicine: A Two-Option Healthcare Service
Chapter 3. An Ethnography of Decision-Making
Chapter 4. Alternative Practices and the Removal of Ja Né
Chapter 5. Patients and Healing Materials: Relations and Dependency

Conclusion: Assembling Patient Multiples and Complementary Logics of Care

Bibliography
Index

The Patient Multiple: An Ethnography of

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    A Hardback by Jonathan Taee

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      View other formats and editions of The Patient Multiple: An Ethnography of by Jonathan Taee

      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 01/01/2017
      ISBN13: 9781785333941, 978-1785333941
      ISBN10: 1785333941

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      In the Himalayan Kingdom of Bhutan, medical patients engage a variety of healing practices to seek cures for their ailments. Patients use the expanding biomedical network and a growing number of traditional healthcare units, while also seeking alternative practices, such as shamanism and other religious healing, or even more provocative practices. The Patient Multiple delves into this healthcare complexity in the context of patients’ daily lives and decision-making processes, showing how these unique mountain cultures are finding new paths to good health among a changing and multifaceted medical topography.



      Trade Review

      “Of considerable interest for academics, The Patient Multiple should be a must-read for medical practitioners working in Bhutan, both citizens and foreigners…Taee does an excellent job of analyzing the distinct ways practitioners in the modern, traditional, and alternative spheres envision and treat patients and their illnesses and how these alternatives in turn resonate with differing notions of ethics, community, and citizenship among other factors.” • Pacific Affairs

      “It is a well thought-out book that attempts to place the concept of medical plurality and especially ‘multiplicity’ in a more complex situation in Bhutan today… The book is comprised of five chapters, written in rich ethnographic style and anthropological analyses.” • Newbooks.asia

      The Patient Multiple is a refreshing account of healing narratives in a medical plural context. It is a wonderful and insightful read, written in a way that is accessible to a wide audience, blending rich description and grounded analysis. Furthermore, beautiful photographs taken by the author accompany and complement the text. In sum, the book is very well suited for students at both undergraduate and post-graduate levels and is an important contribution for those interested in medical pluralism and the shifting healing landscape in the Himalayan region.” • Medical Anthropology Quarterly

      “…the book is clearly structured and includes several photographs that visually underline the ethnographic accounts…[It] offers a welcome contribution to the medical anthropological literature on ‘patient-hood’ and the multiplicity this involves on the ground. With its accessibility and detailed ethnographic examples, it makes a good read for undergraduate courses in medical anthropology and anybody working in or concerned with public health in Asia.” • Anthropos

      “This book is a welcome pioneering ethnography based on case studies that demonstrate a clear understanding of the way in which public health care services in Bhutan integrate both biomedical and ’traditional’ medicine.” • Mona Schrempf, Free University, Berlin

      “This is a timely and much needed study on the relationship between traditional and modern medicine in Bhutan that is grounded in a rich, nuanced ethnographic study.” • Richard Whitecross, Edinburgh Napier University



      Table of Contents

      List of Figures
      Acronyms
      Notes on Language
      Dzongkha Reference Guide
      Acknowledgements
      Map

      Introduction

      Chapter 1. The Patient Multiple: Cures, Healths and Bodies
      Chapter 2. Modernising Traditional Medicine: A Two-Option Healthcare Service
      Chapter 3. An Ethnography of Decision-Making
      Chapter 4. Alternative Practices and the Removal of Ja Né
      Chapter 5. Patients and Healing Materials: Relations and Dependency

      Conclusion: Assembling Patient Multiples and Complementary Logics of Care

      Bibliography
      Index

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