Abstract
Research documents how the care the holistic providers offer represents the quality communication that patients often do not receive from their biomedical providers. However, research investigating the perspectives of holistic providers concerning the role they see themselves playing in the provision of health is limited. This research explores the perceptions of holistic providers in Costa Rica about their communication with their patients. The results reveal two practices of communication—authenticating and integrating as central to providers' communication with patients in the provision of holistic health care. Providers describe their communication as an exploration of an anatomy of pain/suffering, including investigating the location, timing, length, intensity, and overall rhythm of the patient's condition and sense making that leads them to seek the care of a holistic provider. Most holistic providers see their role as being careful or full of care and suggest that they have an obligation to open their heart first of all.
Notes
1 Curandismo is Mexican American folk healing combining Aztec, Spanish, spiritualist, homeopathic, and scientific elements (see Spector, 2004, pp. 262–264).
Spector, R. E. (2004). Cultural diversity in health and illness, 6th ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson-Prentice Hall.