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A Gathering of Native American Healers: Exploring the Interface of Indigenous Tradition and Professional Practice

  • Original Article
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American Journal of Community Psychology

Abstract

This article reports insights from a 4-day Gathering of Native American Healers at the University of Michigan in October of 2010. This event convened 18 traditional healers, clinically trained service providers, and cross-cultural mental health researchers for a structured group dialogue to advance professional knowledge about the integration of Indigenous healing practices and conventional mental health treatments in community-based mental health services for Native Americans. Our thematic analysis of transcripts from five Roundtable sessions afforded several key insights and understandings pertaining to the integration of Indigenous healing and conventional mental health services. First, with reference to traditional healing, the importance of a rampant relationality, various personal qualities, Indigenous spirituality, and maintenance of traditional life and culture were accentuated by Roundtable participants. Second, for traditional healers to practice effectively, Roundtable participants posited that these individuals must maintain personal wellness, cultivate profound knowledge of healing practices, recognize the intrinsic healing potential within all human beings, and work for the community rather than themselves. In speaking to the possibilities and challenges of collaboration between Indigenous and conventional biomedical therapeutic approaches, Roundtable participants recommended the implementation of cultural programming, the observance of mutuality and respect, the importance of clear and honest communication, and the need for awareness of cultural differences as unique challenges that must be collaboratively overcome.

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Acknowledgments

The Healer’s Roundtable was sponsored by the National Center for Institutional Diversity (NCID), Michigan Institute for Clinical and Health Research (MICHR), Office of the Provost, Department of Psychology, Native American Studies Program, and the School of Social Work at the University of Michigan, and by the Fetzer Institute. This article was completed during the second author’s tenure as the Katz Family Endowed Chair in Native American Studies at Montana State University in Bozeman, MT. Additionally, the second author wishes to express his gratitude to the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation for fellowship support during the completion of this article.

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Correspondence to Virgil D. Moorehead Jr..

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Moorehead, V.D., Gone, J.P. & December, D. A Gathering of Native American Healers: Exploring the Interface of Indigenous Tradition and Professional Practice. Am J Community Psychol 56, 383–394 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10464-015-9747-6

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