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Folk Medicine in the Mesilla Valley
| Article
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17224 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
2 / 1990 |
3,948 Words |
| Author
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Martha Oehmke Loustaunau Martha Oehmke Loustaunau is a sociologist on the faculty of
New Mexico State University, Las Cruces. |
Memorial General Hospital (MGH) rises above the city of Las Cruces, New Mexico, like a huge ship plowing the desert sea. Located on a slope descending just west of the Organ Mountains the valley below, MGH is a testament to the population's efforts to themselves and their fellow citizens with the best in modern medical care. From an eight-four-bed hospital on Alameda Street in 1950, to the 160-bed facility established in 1971, services continue to grow. One hundred and three beds were added in 1981, magnetic catheterization lab.
The city and surrounding area are served by 125 physicians, from family practitioners to neurosurgeons, many of whom have been attracted to the area by its growth, mild climate, and slower pace of life. Still, MGH and the physician population are only one part of the health care delivery system in the area known as the Mesilla Valley. There is a much older, more traditional system in the valley that exists beside and within the new. It is not so visible or perhaps as impressive, but it is a part of cultural fabric of the valley itself.
The existence of this second system is evident at the local farmers' market on the Las Cruces downtown mall on any Wednesday or Saturday morning. The herb lady, Mrs. Ochoa, can always be found at her stall, behind an array of carefully labeled packets of manzanilla, gordo lobo, alhucema, poleo, and chamiso. Mrs. Ochoa, a registered nurse whose mother and grandmother were herbalists, expertly recommends remedies for the minor ailments her customers describe. And customers are plentiful for the services and remedies of the folk medical system in the valley.
The valley and its
... (1998 of 23443 Characters)
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