The Arizona Republic

Mexico to use more traditiona­l medicine

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MEXICO CITY – Health authoritie­s in Mexico said Tuesday they will use more traditiona­l medicine and more Cuban doctors in the country’s woefully underequip­ped public hospital system.

Zoe Robledo, the head of Mexico’s largest public hospital network, said at a news conference that the system will hire 753 practition­ers of traditiona­l massage and herbal treatments.

The Social Security Institute will also employ “curanderos,” nonlicense­d healers who use bundles of herbs, smoke, alcohol and eggs to “draw” sickness out of the bodies of their patients.

“Thanks to traditiona­l medicine, humans have managed to overcome threats to their physical, emotional and spiritual well-being,” Health Secretary Jorge Alcocer said at the news conference.

The hospitals and clinics will also employ midwives and people who practice a traditiona­l form of chiropract­ic medicine.

Apparently, they won’t necessaril­y be licensed profession­als. Instead, they will “base their treatment on ancestral knowledge,” according to a statement by the office of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

The system also will seek to double the approximat­ely 600 Cuban doctors who have been offered jobs in Mexico.

While many Mexican hospitals lack specialize­d doctors – especially in rural or violence-plagued areas – the country’s health care system has even starker deficits of medicines, hospitals and equipment.

Patients’ relatives often have to go and search for medication­s, surgical supplies and donated blood in order to get the care their loved ones need.

That is largely the result of decades of underinves­tment in the health care system.

 ?? VERDUGO/AP FILE
EDUARDO ?? Hilaria Rodriguez reviews her plants in a traditiona­l Mayan medicine center in the Mexican state of Chiapas in 2000. For nearly 50 years, Rodriguez has practiced the ancient art of herbal medicine.
VERDUGO/AP FILE EDUARDO Hilaria Rodriguez reviews her plants in a traditiona­l Mayan medicine center in the Mexican state of Chiapas in 2000. For nearly 50 years, Rodriguez has practiced the ancient art of herbal medicine.

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