The issues of Guatemalan people in accessing healthcare originate from complex cultural beliefs and historical legacies, with no apparent social explanation. This research examines how cultural beliefs, and structural challenges collectively influence healthcare access for Indigenous women in Guatemala, with a particular focus on traditional medicine. Indigenous populations often seek traditional practices, such as herbal remedies and spiritual support, as they provide physical and psychosocial relief, and linguistic, cultural, and social barriers that lead to disparities in health outcomes. While the study also explores physical treatment, including herbal remedies, massage, and other traditional interventions, comparing how these practices affect Indigenous women who have no access to modern healthcare services, the study also explores inequality of women and healthcare-seeking pattern of women through analyzing quantitative data from surveys with 100 participants and a review of existing literature, with the investigation on the complex interaction between cultural/traditional beliefs and modern healthcare structures that affects the healthcare access of Indigenous women in Guatemala. The accumulated survey data was reported as a percentage among the answers. The findings reveal that a significant number of Indigenous women are experiencing male-dominated decision-making, still visit traditional healers, use traditional remedies at home, and believe their religious beliefs are crucial in their approach to health and healing.
Choi et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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