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The Spirit Catches You And You Fall Down

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In Anne Fadiman’s notable non-fiction book, The Spirit Catches you and you Fall Down, the early Hmong settlers of California are observed to have certain issues with Western Medicine, resulting in a conflicted relationship between the Hmong community and the Merced Medical Center Merced (MCMC). Fadiman begins with introducing and explaining the Hmong culture and how their lifestyle differs from the West. Then, the story starts focusing around Lia, a Hmong baby born with Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome, a severe form of epilepsy. From here on, the Lees had constant mistrust with the medical treatment, resulting in the Lees to stop listening to the doctor’s instructions. Eventually, Neil Ernst, one of Lia’s primary physicians, had to remove Lia from her household due to the neglect by her parents. They never intended any harm, in fact, they wanted the exact opposite. Nonetheless, Lia went back and forth between foster care and her parents until her condition reached a severe state, where a cascade of other medical issues caused her to become brain dead. Lia lived on in this vegetative condition where her family cared for her in the hospital. First, Fadiman’s thesis is that Western medicine is one-sided and does not account for traditional beliefs, resulting in devastating incompatibilities (1997). One point is that the Hmong culture of never surrendering has always been the main influential factor on the Lees’ actions when it came to caring for Lia (Fadiman 1997). No matter if there

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