Jump to content

Sansanonin addu'a

Daga Wikipedia, Insakulofidiya ta kyauta.
Sansanonin addu'a

Sansanonin addu'o'i cibiyoyin magani ne na addini waɗanda ake amfani da su don magance cututtuka iri-iri a Ghana, da Togo . Hanyoyin jiyya da suka haɗa da duka, yunwar tilastawa da sauran nau'o'in azabtarwa da yawa ana amfani da su a waɗannan wurare. [1] [2]

An ce Ghana ita ce "al'umma mafi yawan addini a duniya", tare da kashi 96% na yawan jama'a da ke nuna wani imani na ruhaniya.[3] Rashin lafiya na kwakwalwa yawanci ana ganin shi ne sakamakon la'ana ko ruhohi masu cutarwa. Abinda kawai aka fahimta don magance wannan matsala shine ta hanyar hanyoyi daban-daban na ruhaniya (wanda wasu ke keta haƙƙin ɗan adam na asali), tare da taimakon likita kaɗan da ake amfani da shi, kamar ta hanyar magani da ake ba marasa lafiya.

Binciken Jami'ar Yale na 2016 ya nuna cewa duka ma'aikatan sansanin addu'a da masu ilimin lafiyar kwakwalwa na asibiti suna nuna sha'awar ra'ayin hadin gwiwa. Musamman, ma'aikatan sansanin addu'a suna da sha'awar taimakawa tare da samarwa da amfani da magunguna, da kuma inganta tsabta da ababen more rayuwa na sansanonin addu'a. Koyaya, ma'aikatan sansanin addu'a suna adawa sosai da bayanin likita game da rashin lafiyar kwakwalwa, maimakon haka sun fi son bayani na allahntaka, yayin da lafiyar kwakwalwa da ma'aikatan kiwon lafiya suka damu da amfani da ayyukan azabtarwa kamar sarƙoƙi. Bugu da ƙari, duk da muhimmancin amfani da magani na dogon lokaci a cikin warkewar mai haƙuri, ma'aikatan sansanin addu'a yawanci suna amincewa da amfani da magani ne kawai a cikin gajeren lokaci.

  1. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named witchesAdinkrah
  2. Vivian E D Ampadu. "The Depiction of Mental Illness in Nigerian and Ghanaian movies: A negative or positive impact on mental health awareness in Ghana" (PDF). Disability-studies.leeds.ac.uk. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-01-11. Retrieved 2016-09-15.
  3. Edwards, Jocelyn (January 2014). "Ghana's mental health patients confined to prayer camps". The Lancet (in Turanci). 383 (9911): 15–16. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(13)62717-8. ISSN 0140-6736. PMID 24400332. S2CID 41728845.