Where There Is No Doctor 2011
Sometimes a person’s belief in a remedy can help with problems that have
completely physical causes.
For example, Mexican villagers have the following home cures for poisonous
snakebite:
3
1. to use ‘guaco’ leaves
2. to bite
the snake
3. to apply tobacco
4. to apply the skin of
a poisonous lizard
5. to smear the snake’s
bile on the bite
In other lands people have their own snakebite remedies—often many different
ones. As far as we know, none of these home remedies has any direct effect
against snake poison. The person who says that a home remedy kept a snake’s
poison from harming him at all was probably bitten by a non-poisonous snake!
Yet any of these home remedies may do some good if a person believes in it.
If it makes him less afraid, his pulse will slow down, he will move and tremble less,
and as a result, the poison will spread through his body more slowly. So there is
less danger!
But the benefit of these home remedies for snakebite is limited. In spite of their
common use, many people still become very ill or die. As far as we know:
No home cure for poisonous bites (whether from snakes,
scorpions, spiders, or other poisonous animals) has much
effect beyond that of the healing power of belief.
For snakebite it is usually better to use modern treatment. Be prepared: obtain
‘antivenoms’ or ‘serums’ for poisonous bites before you need them (see p. 105).
Do not wait until it is too late.