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Saberes e práticas populares em saúde: um estudo sobre raizeiros(as) do mercado municipal de Araguaína/TO
The study aimed to comprehend the knowledges and popular practices of the raizeiros within the health territory, analyzing the origin and succession of their knowledge, as well as their insertion within the health territory. Therefore, the participant-research method was used, with a qualitati...
Autor principal: | Nery, João Carlos Santiago |
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Idioma: | pt_BR |
Publicado em: |
2021
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Assuntos: | |
Acesso em linha: |
http://hdl.handle.net/11612/3423 |
Resumo: |
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The study aimed to comprehend the knowledges and popular practices of the raizeiros within
the health territory, analyzing the origin and succession of their knowledge, as well as their
insertion within the health territory. Therefore, the participant-research method was used, with
a qualitative approach, using a semi-structured interview as an instrument of data collection.
Four raizeiros(as) who operate on the premises of the Municipal Market of Araguaína/TO
participated in the research. Their narratives outlined the contours of the research. Based on
the collected data, some authors grounded the discussion, such as Geertz (1997 and 2008),
Saquet (2007 and 2019), Santos (1989, 2007 and 2008), among others. In face of that, it was
evident that the raizeiro's popular knowledge in health has an important magnitude, especially
due to the diversity of their knowledge. It was highlighted that the family context is the main
environment for the transmission of knowledge about natural remedies, mainly through
orality. Furthermore, power relations within the health territory in the interaction between
popular and scientific knowledge were emphasized. The raizeiros(as) are marginalized within
this territory and their knowledge is not properly recognized, with consequences, among
others: the inferiorization of natural remedies to the detriment of allopathic medicines, the
devaluation of popular knowledge, the lack of access to land, exclusion from participation in
events involving public health, exclusion from membership in health councils, the
disproportionate health surveillance, the lack of labor structure, the lack of public policies and
the lack of sanitary support. |