The article "American Aboriginal Medicine" cited from the academic-oriented article published in "June Paraglegia News" in the June 2004 issue arises from Native American medicine, its creeds, its origins, and from now to the present I will explain some difficulties. This article is objective, it seems to provide a relationship between Native American medicine and Western modern medicine but at the end of this article there seems to be more differences. In the article "National Aboriginal Medicine" (NAM), author Johnston pointed out that (NAM) has six categories: contribution, indigenous medicine, spiritual and connected roles, cultural regeneration Disability
The healing process of American indigenous medicine is very different from what most people today are seeing. The treatment of Native American includes religious, mental, herbal and ritual beliefs and a combination of customs for medical and emotional conditions. From the viewpoint of Native Americans, medicine means healing people more than cure disease. Traditional therapists aim to believe that most diseases arise from mental problems and make individuals "whole"
In recent years, medical anthropologists have deeply deeply examined the traditional native American medical practices, how these actions interact with modern medicine, and how Native Americans look and use them It was. One project has made remarkable progress in understanding these differences, and this is the Navajo treatment project. "One of the most obvious ways of this complexity is the broad range of life in the Navajo tribe, religion and spirituality are closely related to health care and healing.In fact, healing is a religion of the Navajo tribe The central theme and sacred is Nava. The core element of Huo Medical 1).
The article "American Aboriginal Medicine" cited from the academic-oriented article published in "June Paraglegia News" in the June 2004 issue arises from Native American medicine, its creeds, its origins, and from now to the present I will explain some difficulties. This article is objective, it seems to provide a relationship between Native American medicine and Western modern medicine but at the end of this article there seems to be more differences. In the article "National Aboriginal Medicine" (NAM), author Johnston pointed out that (NAM) has six categories: contribution, indigenous medicine, spiritual and connected roles, cultural regeneration Disability
The relationship between Native American medicine in the US and modern medicine is interpreted as 'Native American Indian medicine'