Puerto Rican Spiritualists View Mental Illness: The Faith Healer as a Paraprofessional
Abstract
The authors examined the attitudes and beliefs about mental illness of 20 faith healers in the Puerto Rican community of New York City; these were compared with data collected earlier from samples of Spanish-speaking community leaders and a cross-section of Puerto Rican household heads. Spiritualists appear to be an idiosyncratic group differentiated within their culture for the purpose of healing. The authors emphasize the lack of professional acknowledgment of the role native healers play in this and other minorities and present two case studies that may help to explain this lack of acknowledgment.
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