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Since the earliest times, men and women have been engaged in the practices we today call nursing. These individuals combined biological, nutritional, social, aesthetic, and spiritual support to optimize the health of their communities. While they have been called medicine men or witch doctors, these terms indicate a lack of understanding of the significance of their contribution, and that the healer may have been either gender. If we examine the practices they are very similar to what we today know as community health nursing.

 

Pat Nixon in The Medical Story of Early Texas (1946) repeats the story of how Major Porfirio Zamora was cured of "infantile paralysis" by a Juan Castro a chief of the Tolcha people (pp. 17-19). This treatment was very similar to that developed later by Sister Kenney.

To the multitude of healers from many different lands and peoples, this humble nurse salutes you skills.

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