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APY2602 Assignment 2 (Exceptional Response) Semester 2 DUE September 2025.

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Medical anthropology – also known as the anthropology of health – examines health, illness and healing through a cultural and comparative . By studying how different societies construct and respond to disease, this discipline emphasizes that health concepts and practices are culturally . Rather than assuming Western biomedicine represents a universal standard, medical anthropology highlights that all medical systems (including biomedicine) are socially and historically specific. Accordingly, one of its central tasks is to critique the assumed universality of Western medicine and to explore alternative notions of well-being. This essay examines how anthropological theory and research illuminate health and healing in both Western and indigenous contexts. We first review key functions of medical anthropology, including its reflexive critique of biomedicine, holistic approach, attention to social determinants, and recognition of medical pluralism. We then apply these insights to Western health systems (focusing on biomedicine and its alternatives) and to diverse indigenous medical systems (emphasizing traditional healers and cosmologies). Drawing on scholarly evidence and ethnographic examples, we demonstrate how medical anthropology contributes to a deeper, more culturally sensitive understanding of health in any society.

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APY2602
Assignment 2
Semester 2
DUE September 2025

,APY2602

Assignment 2

Semester 2

DUE September 2025




The Relevance of Medical Anthropology in Understanding Health, Healing, and
Medical Systems in Western and Indigenous Societies

, Contents

1. Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 3

2. Theoretical Perspectives in Medical Anthropology ............................................................................... 3

2.1. Critique of Biomedical Universality ................................................................................................. 3

2.2. Cultural Relativism and Holistic Perspective .................................................................................. 4

2.3. Social Determinants and Power Structures .................................................................................... 5

2.4. Medical Pluralism and Integration................................................................................................... 5

3. Western Medical Systems: An Anthropological View ............................................................................ 7

3.1. The Biomedical Model as a Cultural System .................................................................................. 7

3.2. Illness, Medicalization, and Stigma................................................................................................. 7

3.3. Complementary and Alternative Medicine in the West ................................................................... 8

4. Indigenous Health and Healing Systems .............................................................................................. 9

4.1. Indigenous Cosmologies of Health ................................................................................................. 9

4.2. Traditional Healers and Healing Practices ..................................................................................... 9

4.3. Case Studies of Indigenous Medicine .......................................................................................... 10

4.4. Colonial Legacies and Integration ................................................................................................ 11

5. Conclusion ........................................................................................................................................... 12

References .............................................................................................................................................. 13

, 1. Introduction

Medical anthropology – also known as the anthropology of health – examines health,
illness and healing through a cultural and comparative lenspressbooks.cuny.edu. By
studying how different societies construct and respond to disease, this discipline
emphasizes that health concepts and practices are culturally
rootedpressbooks.cuny.edu. Rather than assuming Western biomedicine represents a
universal standard, medical anthropology highlights that all medical systems (including
biomedicine) are socially and historically specific. Accordingly, one of its central tasks is
to critique the assumed universality of Western medicine and to explore alternative
notions of well-being. This essay examines how anthropological theory and research
illuminate health and healing in both Western and indigenous contexts. We first review
key functions of medical anthropology, including its reflexive critique of biomedicine,
holistic approach, attention to social determinants, and recognition of medical pluralism.
We then apply these insights to Western health systems (focusing on biomedicine and
its alternatives) and to diverse indigenous medical systems (emphasizing traditional
healers and cosmologies). Drawing on scholarly evidence and ethnographic examples,
we demonstrate how medical anthropology contributes to a deeper, more culturally
sensitive understanding of health in any society.



2. Theoretical Perspectives in Medical Anthropology

Medical anthropology’s relevance stems from its distinctive theoretical commitments. It
employs cultural relativism and a holistic perspective to examine health across
settings, and it explicitly questions taken-for-granted assumptions in
biomedicinepressbooks.cuny.edupmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov. Below we outline several key
perspectives:

2.1. Critique of Biomedical Universality

A foundational function of medical anthropology is to critically examine Western
biomedicine as a cultural system.

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