@article{oai:nagasaki-u.repo.nii.ac.jp:00016164, author = {Nomura, Ayumi}, issue = {2}, journal = {保健学研究, Health science research}, month = {Mar}, note = {Many of medical anthropologists have researched from only one-side of view of the point. The people studying medical treatment should not research objects (patients) from only their own perspective; rather, patients should research themselves as their own specialists and observe the situation and their status from a detached point of view. This is a deconstructivist idea for medical treatment and nursing. Patients and people who work in the medical field look at their own environments from the point of view of an anthropologist, and therefore are released from their former passive situations. I want to call them “wild anthropologists.” It is interesting for me that there could be an anthropologist (the medical practitioner) who creates such wild anthropologists, who then disappears as their situations are resolved. I learnt it through the area study( Japan and Sri Lanka)., 保健学研究 = Health science research 21(2): 115-119, 2009}, pages = {115--119}, title = {“Area Studies in Nursing” from the Perspective of Medical Anthropology -Nursing and Medical Anthropology for interdisciplinary field of study-}, volume = {21}, year = {2009} }