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Article
Concepts of Illness Among the Swahili of Lamu, Kenya
Journal of Transcultural Nursing (2013)
  • Rebecca Gearhart, Ph.D., Illinois Wesleyan University
  • Munib Said Abdulrehman, MSN, FNP-BC, PhD(c), Illinois State University
Abstract
The Swahili of Lamu, Kenya, understand illness as the result of a spiritual imbalance caused by personal transgression or an attack by harmful forces directed by an envious person. Another underlying component of the Swahili concept of illness is that each person’s physical body operates in conjunction with personal attributes that are fixed at birth and determine moral character, behavior, and predisposition to ailments. When physical symptoms occur, the Swahili focus on identifying the human or supernatural entity that caused the illness in consultation with a range of healers who specialize in a variety of curing strategies. Two case studies illustrate how culturally congruent nursing care can be achieved when health care providers understand the Swahili framework of diagnosing and treating illness.
Keywords
  • transcultural health,
  • ethnography,
  • holistic health,
  • international educational experiences,
  • Swahili,
  • Kenyan,
  • East Africa,
  • concepts of illness
Publication Date
Winter December, 2013
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/1043659613515713
Publisher Statement
Journal of Transcultural Nursing is published by Sage. For more information on this journal please visit the Journal of Transcultural Nursing online.
Citation Information
Rebecca Gearhart and Munib Said Abdulrehman. "Concepts of Illness Among the Swahili of Lamu, Kenya" Journal of Transcultural Nursing Vol. 25 Iss. 3 (2013) p. 218 - 222 ISSN: 1043-6596
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/rebecca_gearhart/10/