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Thousands of years of clinical wisdom, almost erased...
That's what this book is actually about. Dr. Daniel Nuzum spent decades watching patients recover from conditions conventional medicine had written off, and he kept returning to the same question: why do we keep treating Indigenous healing traditions like anthropology when they were functioning medicine long before we had labs to explain any of it? Indigenous healers understood that a sick body was rarely just a physical problem. Grief would show up as illness. Community fracture would show up as illness. Spiritual disconnection, ecological disruption (none of it got separated from the clinical picture). Modern psychoneuroimmunology is spending billions now confirming what Cherokee, Lakota, Navajo, and Haudenosaunee healers already knew through generations of direct observation.This textbook covers 17 distinct Indigenous healing traditions and then traces what actually happened to that knowledge. Because it didn't disappear. Echinacea, goldenseal, willow bark, black cohosh, they didn't just wander into American medicine on their own. Indigenous teachers carried that knowledge to frontier physicians who actually bothered to write it down, and the Eclectic doctors of the 19th century, King, Felter, the Lloyd Brothers, built some of the most rigorous botanical clinical frameworks in American history directly from that exchange. Vol. I threads all of this through Dr. Nuzum's Four-Phase Healing Framework, which sounds like a modern invention until you realize the same sequence (stabilize before you detox, cleanse before you rebuild) shows up in healing ceremonies across every single tradition in the book.If you're a naturopathic student trying to understand where the philosophy actually came from, this is the missing context nobody hands you in school. Practitioners burned out on symptom management keep finding their way to this book too, and honestly so do people who just suspect medicine lost something important somewhere along the way. It's a clinical education text, not a feel-good alternative health read. Real historical rigor, written by someone who believes you can read a lab panel and still understand why ceremony matters. Those two things were never supposed to be separate.Wie gefällt Ihnen unser Shop?