Science in the Soil: How Dr. Charles S. Finch III Documented the Medicine of the Serer People
Science in the Soil: How Dr. Charles S. Finch III Documented the Medicine of the Serer People For generations, Western colonial frameworks dismissed continental African healing systems as mere folklore or superstition. However, between 1991 and 1995, Dr. Charles S. Finch III—a board-certified family physician, epidemiologist, and Director of International Health at the Morehouse School of Medicine—set out to challenge this narrative using the very tools of modern medical research. Dr. Finch’s landmark fieldwork among the Serer (Seereer) people of Senegal remains a definitive model for how Western-trained clinicians can ethically interface with, quantify, and preserve indigenous knowledge systems. His work proved that traditional healers were not a primitive alternative, but a sophisticated, empirical frontline medical infrastructure. Quantifying Indigenous Infrastructure: The 1991–1992 KAP Survey Dr. Finch’s investigation began with a large-scale Knowledge, Attitudes, an...