Volume 4, Issue 2 , Pages 113-119, March 2008
Feeling the Pulse in Maya Medicine: An Endangered Traditional Tool for Diagnosis, Therapy, and Tracking Patients’ Progress
Throughout history, diagnostic tools utilizing the human senses, such as pulse diagnosis, have developed all over the world. In many areas where medical technology is limited or absent, they persist, whereas in other areas these skills are in danger of extinction. The practice of pulse diagnosis by the accomplished Maya healer, Don Elijio Panti, who lived in Belize, Central America, was observed over the final decade of his life and work. Don Elijio used pulse palpation as a diagnostic tool, therapeutic tool, and as a means for tracking patients’ progress. He could diagnose a wide array of both physical and spiritual afflictions and was observed diagnosing 42 different conditions or states throughout this period by feeling the pulse. He recognized at least 28 distinct pulse types. Herein, the authors report the detailed system of an endangered diagnostic tradition as practiced by the late, acclaimed Maya healer, including pulse-type descriptions and corresponding diagnoses. Pulse diagnosis is still practiced today among some of Belize’s diminishing population of traditional healers, although no practice appears to be as developed as that of the previous generation of Maya healers. Furthermore, it is unlikely that there are new practitioners of pulse diagnosis in the Maya community to maintain and build on the disappearing tradition. Given the unfortunate paucity of data on Maya pulse diagnosis, the practice of pulse diagnosis in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) is used as an illustrative framework for documenting Don Elijio’s practice. Corresponding diagnoses from TCM and Don Elijio’s system are compared, elucidating similarities between the two disparate medical systems.
Key words: Ethnomedicine, pulse diagnosis, Belize, Maya
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Support for the ongoing Belize Ethnobotany Project, began in 1987, has been provided by the following organizations over the past two decades: The U.S. National Institute of Health/National Cancer Institute N01-CM-67924 (MB), The U.S. Agency for International Development 505-0035-G-0PG-8001-00 (MB, RA), The Metropolitan Life Foundation, The Overbrook Foundation, Grinnell College, The Edward John Noble Foundation, The Rex Foundation, The Rockefeller Foundation, The Healing Forest Conservancy, The John and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, The Gildea Foundation, The Nathan Cummings Foundation, The Garden Club of America, as well as, the Philecology Trust, through the establishment of Philecology Curatorship of Economic Botany at the New York Botanical Garden.
PII: S1550-8307(07)00454-5
doi:10.1016/j.explore.2007.12.002
© 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 4, Issue 2 , Pages 113-119, March 2008
