The cultural logic of Indian medicine: prognosis and etiology in Rajasthani popular therapeutics

scientific article

The cultural logic of Indian medicine: prognosis and etiology in Rajasthani popular therapeutics is …
instance of (P31):
review articleQ7318358
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1016/0277-9536(92)90280-4
P698PubMed publication ID1641668

P2093author name stringLambert H
P433issue10
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjectIndiaQ668
P304page(s)1069-1076
P577publication date1992-05-01
P1433published inSocial Science and MedicineQ7550785
P1476titleThe cultural logic of Indian medicine: prognosis and etiology in Rajasthani popular therapeutics
P478volume34

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q35073948"All of those things we don't eat": a culture-centered approach to dietary health meanings for Asian Indians living in the United States
Q36545431A comparative analysis of communication about sex, health and sexual health in India and South Africa: Implications for HIV prevention
Q39488832Careseeking for illness in young infants in an urban slum in India
Q27305390Community perceptions of behaviour change communication interventions of the maternal neonatal and child health programme in rural Bangladesh: an exploratory study
Q47328329Contextualising experiences of depression in women from South Asian communities: a discursive approach
Q30493968Health beliefs and folk models of diabetes in British Bangladeshis: a qualitative study
Q47257915Local understandings of vulnerability and protection during the neonatal period in Sylhet District, Bangladesh: a qualitative study
Q39158355Popular therapeutics and medical preferences in rural north India
Q47419428Skillful Revelation: Local Healers, Rationalists, and Their 'Trickery' in Chhattisgarh, Central India
Q33961707Spirit (shen), styles of knowing, and authority in contemporary Chinese medicine
Q41149473Why psychiatrists in India prescribe so many drugs
Q47734040Wrongdoing and Retribution: Children's Conceptions of Illness Causality in a Central Indian Village

Search more.