Traditional, Complementary and Alternative Medicine(s): History vs. Modernity
Type: Call for Papers
Date: July 31, 2016
Location: Poland
Subject Fields: Anthropology, History of Science, Medicine, and Technology, Psychology, Health and Health Care
Traditional, Complementary and Alternative Medicine(s):
History vs. Modernity
International Conference
4-5 November 2016 – Warsaw, Poland
organised by Interdisciplinary Research Foundation
Keynote speaker: Dr. Joana Almeida, University of London
The
consumption of traditional, complementary and alternative medicine
(TCAM) – a wide range of practices, treatments and technologies that
have not been traditionally associated with the public health care
system or training of conventional medical practitioners – has attracted
much attention as an emerging health care issue in recent years.
Practices that include but are not limited to homeopathy, osteopathy,
herbal therapy and acupuncture are widely used in many countries: survey
findings indicate that, in Europe, North America and other
industrialized regions, over 50% of the population have used
complementary and alternative medicine at least once (WHO 2003); for
instance, in the UK, between seven and eleven percent of people visit
CAM practitioners every year (Andrews 2002).
Over the last three
decades, the developed countries have been involved in the dynamic
process of camisation, the institutionalization of CAM in healthcare and
applying CAM treatments and solutions in everyday life (Almeida 2012).
This process has been challenging the prevailing healthcare systems and
changing relationship between TCAM and the state having the potential to
reverse the direction of medicalisation and to encourage
demedicalisation.
The conference seeks to explore both the history
and the current situation of TCAM in the world. Papers are invited on
topics related, but not limited, to:
1) Mind-body interventions:
a) Psychotherapy (psychodynamic, behaviour, cognitive, supportive, body-oriented therapies);
b) support groups;
c) meditation (transcendental meditation, relaxation response);
d) imagery;
e) hypnosis;
f) biofeedback;
g) yoga;
h) dance therapy;
i) music therapy;
j) art therapy;
k) prayer and mental healing;
2) bioelectromagnetics;
3) aternative systems of medical practice:
a) professionalized health systems
- traditional oriental medicine (acupuncture, moxibustion, acupressure, remedial massage, cupping, qigong, herbal medicine, nutrition, dietetics)
- ayurvedic medicine (individualized dietary, eating, sleeping and exercise programs, including yoga, breathing exercises and meditation);
- homeopathic medicine
- anthroposophically extended medicine;
- naturopathic medicine;
- environmental medicine;
- community-based health care (shamanic healing, singing, sweating);
- urban community-based systems (Alcoholics Anonymous);
- popular health care (from informal sources);
4) manual healing methods: physical healing methods (osteopathic medicine, chiropractic, massage therapy).
We
invite proposals from various disciplines including medical sciences,
history, philosophy, sociology, anthropology, literature, etc.
The language of the conference is English.