, , o a e 00 offers an insider's 100 at cul­ ral practices many of us have experienced only in fiction. other cultures. Her new book, "Walkin' Over Medicine," re­ veals the secrets of many of those remedies - and also takes to-task today's health care pro­ fessionals who don't often take this centuries-old form of medi­ cine seriously. "There are two different sys­ tems existing at the same time, " Snow said. "This creates a con­ flict, a clash many doctors don't even know exists." "Walkin' Over Medicine" is an account of how some exotic, and even some not-so-exotic plants and herb are used to treat everything from high blood pres­ sure to warts to a broken heart. Written in story form, the book It's so many things we use! Why, there's a Lotta weeds out there now; why, you're uialkin' over medicine!" - Detroit woman Imervlewed In ·W.,k'n' Over ed/elM- "ONE NIGHT," Snow says, "she was just about to sleep through her midnight do e when he felt someone shaking her shoulder. She opened her eyes and her dead mother was there saying, 'It's time for your medicine. ,,, Whether 'Or not the woman's long-dead mother was really there is irrelevant, Snow says. The woman truly believed it, 80 that's all that matters. "We have a cultural bias against this," she says. "If dead people came to you to give you advice, you'd keep it to "ourself or people would think you're crazy." A question often asked of Snow is "Do folk remedies really work?" She says in some cases there is proof that plants and herbs produce biochemical changes. Other times, it can be just a placebo effect. "Thinking that you are doing something, taking some kind of action, can be very beneficial," Snow said. . On the other hand, here' the danger that if people believe omething bad is going to hap­ pen to them, it will. Snow calls this the "nocebo" respo e. "The 1S good evid n tha beli f cures but i also can kill " she y."1 f you have a belief y tem that tells you this kind of thing IS ible you can, in fact, die." o 0 S OW mo t yaluabl re arch came rom serving as a behavioral sci ntist helping young physicians in p - diatnc clinics. "Qui e often the doctors were calJed on to treat families whose beliefs were very differ­ ent from their own," she said. Modern medicine is letting down both the people who rely on folk r medies and the physi- . cians who eventually treat thes people, Snow said. "We don't train young physi- . cians to ask people why they think they're ick, what brought them to the doctor and what they've been doing about it," she said. "We have to do a better job of training young physicians to be sympathetic, to listen to their patients and know what some of their beliefs might be," she said. There is orne progress being made. At MSU, first-year medi­ cal students are required to take a course in the doctor-patient relationship. Despite the centuri of his­ tory behind many folk and tradi­ tional cu ,Snow say more and mo people are turning to alternative medicine, including acupuncture and faith healing. "Th ar not just little old ladi in the Ozarks, either," he says . People who are using th things tend to be younger, afnu­ ent and well-educated." .• "YES, THIS BOOK is a u t of home remedies, but they are in a context," Snow says. "They are in the context of stories of what people's lives are like." For example, she tells the story of a woman held "captive" by an abu ive husband. The man's power over her stemmed from a potion he made of roo and her ,a potion which con­ tained a form of voodoo that wouldn't allow her to leave him. "Her husband kept her cap­ tive because she was convinced he had worked magic on her," Snow said. "It was part of her belief system and she believed it worked." 'Walkin' Over Medicine" is a culmination of more than 25 years of research by Snow. She has spent those years poking . around "folk pharmacies" in in­ ner city Detroit learning from faith healers and talking to hun­ dreds of people who never doub the medicinal power of the plants and roo most of us only step on. he book chronicles a set of belie ha modern medicine qu ite often ignores. Th lie � r n from som hin impl= as u ing catnip tea to 'It i t acolicky baby to the wear­ ing of n asafetida bag to ward off d ise se. The book al 0 touches upon a s rong belief in . the pow r of the upernatural. S now ells the story of a woman, a licensed practical nu from Lansing, Mich., who was seriously ill and on medica­ tion she needed to take every four hours around the clock .. 'Do folk remedies really work? In some cases therels proof that plants and herbs produce changes. Other imes it can be just a placebo effect.' EAST LANSIN�, Ie h. Loudell .g now is a woman of medicine who thinks it's high time the health care profession literally returned to its "roots." And for that matter, to its herbs and its plants, too. Snow is a Michigan State University medical anthropolo­ gist who's a firm believer in the potential benefits of many of the folk and traditional remedies used by African Americans and .RY. 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