ETHNOGRAPHY OF THERAPEUTIC PROCESS IN RELIGIOUS HEALING
Project Number5R01MH050394-05
Former Number2R01MH040473-06
Contact PI/Project LeaderCSORDAS, THOMAS
Awardee OrganizationCASE WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
The proposed project is a cross-cultural extension of a research program
on therapeutic process in religious healing, grounded in the
anthropological analogy between religious healing and psychotherapy. The
aim of the proposed project is to examine the experiential specificity of
therapeutic change processes in religious healing among Navajo Indians.
The methodological perspective is that of cultural anthropology, and is
based on a qualitative, ethnographic, interpretive research paradigm.
The project will have two phases, an ethnography of therapeutic practice,
and an ethnography of therapeutic process.
The first phase will be to construct a systematic description of the
contemporary Navajo religious healing system, which includes three
principal categories: traditional Navajo healing, Native American Church
healing, and Christian healing. Data from forty healers in each of these
three categories (N= 120) will be collected by means of ethnographic
interviews and observation of religious healing events. The specific
aims are description of the repertoire of therapeutic procedures and
events within each form of healing, their underlying ethnopsychology of
self and transformation, the rhetorical resources available to healers,
and healers' perceptions of the compatibility of theirs with other forms
of healing.
The second phase will examine experiential process in subsets of eight
healers working with four patients each, for a total of thirty-two
patients in each category of healing (N= 96). Methods include
ethnographic interviews, clinical diagnostic interviews, and elicitation
of experiential commentaries (using the Interpersonal Process Recall
method of psychotherapy process research) from participants in healing
events. Specific aims are to determine how each form of Navajo healing
calls into play the elements specified in a previously elaborated model
of therapeutic process, to construct prototypic accounts of patients
engaged in each form of religious healing, and to determine the role of
religious healing in addressing psychosocial problems frequently
associated with the disorders of depression and alcohol/substance abuse,
problems which conventional mental health resources have proven
inadequate to resolve.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
Native Americansalternative medicinebehavioral /social science research tagcommunity mental health servicesculturefolk medicinehuman subjecthuman therapy evaluationinterviewmental disorder diagnosispsychological stressorpsychotherapyreligionsemanticssocial psychologystressvocabulary
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01MH050394-05
Publications
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No Publications available for 5R01MH050394-05
Patents
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Outcomes
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Clinical Studies
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History
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