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AuthorVardeman, Ella
AuthorVandebroek, Ina
Accessioned date2022-09-09T01:22:37Z
Available date2022-09-09T01:22:37Z
Year2022
CitationVardeman, E., & Vandebroek, I. (2022). Caribbean women’s health and transnational ethnobotany. Economic Botany, 76(2), 205-226. Recuperado de:es
URIhttps://bvearmb.do/handle/123456789/1494
AbstractImmigrants from the Dominican Republic (DR) and Haiti are among the top foreign–born communities in New York City (NYC). As people migrate to new countries, they bring their ethnomedical beliefs and practices, and adapt their plant pharmacopoeias. Haiti and the DR share a flora on the island of Hispaniola. In NYC, the flora is limited to what is available in the city. We selected plants for future laboratory research based on ethnobotanical data from two surveys among Dominicans in the DR and NYC, and a Haitian literature review. In both Dominican datasets, gynecological infections were the top women’s health condition treated with plants. We identified 10 species for this purpose reported by Dominicans that are also known medicines in Haitian culture, although not yet documented for women’s health.es
LanguageEnglishes
PublishedEconomic Botany, 76(2), 205-226es
Rights© 2021, by The New York Botanical Garden. Article provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative.es
SubjectBotánicaes
SubjectSaludes
SubjectFlora ─ República Dominicanaes
TitleCaribbean women’s health and transnational ethnobotanyes
dc.identifier.doi10.1007/s12231-021-09526-3
Material typeArticlees
Type of contentScientific researches
AccessOpenes
AudienceTechnicians, professionals and scientistses


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© 2021, by The New York Botanical Garden. Article provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative.
© 2021, by The New York Botanical Garden. Article provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative.