HEALERS - definição. O que é HEALERS. Significado, conceito
Diclib.com
Dicionário ChatGPT
Digite uma palavra ou frase em qualquer idioma 👆
Idioma:

Tradução e análise de palavras por inteligência artificial ChatGPT

Nesta página você pode obter uma análise detalhada de uma palavra ou frase, produzida usando a melhor tecnologia de inteligência artificial até o momento:

  • como a palavra é usada
  • frequência de uso
  • é usado com mais frequência na fala oral ou escrita
  • opções de tradução de palavras
  • exemplos de uso (várias frases com tradução)
  • etimologia

O que (quem) é HEALERS - definição

FORM OF NON-SCIENTIFIC HEALING
Alternative medicines; Complementary and alternative methods; Complementary and Alternative Methods; Holistic health; Alternative Medicine; Healer (alternative medicine); Complementary medicine; Complementary and alternative medicine; Alternative medicine (issues with and criticism of); Alternative healing; Holistic medicine; Healers; Complementary and alternative therapy; Holistic Health; Complementary Medicine; Natural Cures; Natural remedies; Holistic therapies; Holistic therapy; Complimentary medicine; Complementary medicines; Complementary therapies; Complementary and Alternative Medicine; Alternative therapy; CER (natural cure); Alternative health; Complementary or alternative medicine; Complementary therapy; Allopathic and osteopathic medicine; Osteopathic allopathic; Alternative therapies; Controversial therapies; Allopathic osteopathic; CAM (medicine); Integrative Medicine; Integrated health; Integrated medicine; Pseudo-therapy; Pseudo-therapies; Pseudotherapy; Pseudotherapies; Homeopathy and allopathy; Complimentary and alternative medicine; Alternative and complementary medicine; Natural treatments for pain; Whole medical system; Whole medical systems; Fringe medicine; Integrated Medicine; New age medicine; Alternate medicine; New Age Medicine; Pseudo-medicine; Alt med; New Age medicine; Integrative medicine; Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/Integrative Medicine; Integral medicine; Chinese integrative medicine; Chinese Integrative Medicine; Alt-med; Alternative medical system; Alternative medical systems; Pseudomedicine; Integrative Health Practices; Complementary/alternative medicine; Unconventional medicine; Alternative medicine practitioner; The Horstmann Technique; Alternative-medicine; Complementary therapists; Alternative physical therapy; Integrative health; Whole health; Integrative health care; So-called complementary and alternative medicine; Noetic medicine; Noetic health; Heterodox medicine; Integrative Health; Medical Pluralism; Alternative meds; Questionable medicine; Altmed; Irregular medicine; Unorthodox medicine; Alternative treatments; Alternative treatment; Holistic Medicine; National Center for Complementary and Integrative Medicine; Center for Integrative Medicine
  • "''They told me if I took 1000 pills at night I should be quite another thing in the morning''", an early 19th-century satire on [[Morison's Vegetable Pills]], an alternative medicine supplement
  • [[Acupuncture]] involves insertion of needles in the body
  • adjusting]]" the spine
  • [[Edzard Ernst]], an authority on scientific study of alternative therapies and diagnoses, and the first university professor of CAM, in (2012)
  • edition=1st American}}</ref>
  • [[Marcia Angell]]: "There cannot be two kinds of medicine&nbsp;– conventional and alternative."<ref name=Angell1998/>
  •  page=215}}</ref>
  • Health campaign flyers, as in this example from the [[Food and Drug Administration]], warn the public about unsafe products.
  • Ready-to-drink [[traditional Chinese medicine]] mixture

Traditional healers of Southern Africa         
  • Typical flyer advertising found around the major cities of South Africa
  • An initiate (''ithwasa'') being led towards the goat that will be sacrificed at her initiation into becoming a sangoma
  • mutis]], medicine stored in containers.
  • Preparing and drying out freshly picked mutis
  • ''Isangoma'' in traditional attire dancing in celebration of his ancestors
  • Alexandra Township]], Johannesburg, Gogo Mashele of the Tshwane Traditional & Faith Healers Forum welcomes new sangomas (including a white thwasa)
  • Sangoma/N'anga in Johannesburg, South Africa, performing a traditional baptism to protect the spirit of the baby
  • Sangoma performing a divination by reading the bones after being thrown
  • Sangomas greeting each other
PRACTITIONERS OF TRADITIONAL AFRICAN MEDICINE IN SOUTHERN AFRICA
Inyanga; Sangomas; Sangoma; Traditional Healers of South Africa; Igqirha; Traditional healers of South Africa
Traditional healers of Southern Africa are practitioners of traditional African medicine in Southern Africa. They fulfill different social and political roles in the community, including divination, healing physical, emotional and spiritual illnesses, directing birth or death rituals, finding lost cattle, protecting warriors, counteracting witchcraft, and narrating the history, cosmology, and concepts of their tradition.
healer         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
The Healer; The Healer (disambiguation); The Healers; Healer (disambiguation); Healer (album); The Healer (film)
(healers)
A healer is a person who heals people, especially a person who heals through prayer and religious faith.
N-COUNT
healer         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
The Healer; The Healer (disambiguation); The Healers; Healer (disambiguation); Healer (album); The Healer (film)
n. a faith healer

Wikipédia

Alternative medicine

Alternative medicine is any practice that aims to achieve the healing effects of medicine despite lacking biological plausibility, testability, repeatability, or evidence from clinical trials. Unlike modern medicine, which employs the scientific method to test plausible therapies by way of responsible and ethical clinical trials, producing repeatable evidence of either effect or of no effect, alternative therapies reside outside of medical science and do not originate from using the scientific method, but instead rely on testimonials, anecdotes, religion, tradition, superstition, belief in supernatural "energies", pseudoscience, errors in reasoning, propaganda, fraud, or other unscientific sources. Frequently used terms for relevant practices are New Age medicine, pseudo-medicine, holistic medicine, unorthodox medicine, fringe medicine, and unconventional medicine, with little distinction from quackery.

Some alternative practices are based on theories that contradict the established science of how the human body works; others resort to the supernatural or superstitious to explain their effect or lack thereof. In others, the practice has plausibility but lacks a positive risk–benefit outcome probability. Research into alternative therapies often fails to follow proper research protocols (such as placebo-controlled trials, blind experiments and calculation of prior probability), providing invalid results. History has shown that if a method is proven to work, it ceases to be alternative and becomes mainstream medicine.

Much of the perceived effect of an alternative practice arises from a belief that it will be effective (the placebo effect), or from the treated condition resolving on its own (the natural course of disease). This is further exacerbated by the tendency to turn to alternative therapies upon the failure of medicine, at which point the condition will be at its worst and most likely to spontaneously improve. In the absence of this bias, especially for diseases that are not expected to get better by themselves such as cancer or HIV infection, multiple studies have shown significantly worse outcomes if patients turn to alternative therapies. While this may be because these patients avoid effective treatment, some alternative therapies are actively harmful (e.g. cyanide poisoning from amygdalin, or the intentional ingestion of hydrogen peroxide) or actively interfere with effective treatments.

The alternative medicine sector is a highly profitable industry with a strong lobby, and faces far less regulation over the use and marketing of unproven treatments. Complementary medicine (CM), complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), integrated medicine or integrative medicine (IM), and holistic medicine attempt to combine alternative practices with those of mainstream medicine. Traditional medicine practices become "alternative" when used outside their original settings and without proper scientific explanation and evidence. Alternative methods are often marketed as more "natural" or "holistic" than methods offered by medical science, that is sometimes derogatorily called "Big Pharma" by supporters of alternative medicine. Billions of dollars have been spent studying alternative medicine, with few or no positive results and many methods thoroughly disproven.

Exemplos do corpo de texto para HEALERS
1. We think part of the answer to turning that around is being better healers." Talbot continued, "And what is going to help us be better healers?
2. Through Afghanistan’s many wars, the faith healers have flourished.
3. I believe in the neighborhood helpers and healers.
4. But HIV can actually be transmitted by traditional healers.
5. And traditional healers say they can make up to $28 for a love remedy.