Internationally peer reviewed public health and ethnobotany cancer research, and Maroon-West African PhD Dissertation

On October 27, 2011 by Surfing Medicine

Ragosta, S., Harris, I., Gyakari, N., Otoo, E., & Asase, A. (2015). Participatory Ethnomedicinal Cancer Research with Fante-Akan Herbalists in Rural Ghana. Ethnobiology Letters, 6(1), 66-79. https://doi.org/10.14237/ebl.6.1.2015.253. Click image below to read full article online:

Ragosta G, Evensen C, Atwill ER, et al. Risk factors for elevated Enterococcus concentrations in a rural tropical island watershed. J Environ Manage. 2011;92(8):1910-1915. doi:10.1016/j.jenvman.2011.02.017. Click image below to read abstract online:

Ragosta G, Evensen C, Atwill ER, et al. Causal connections between water quality and land use in a rural tropical island watershed: rural tropical island watershed analysis. Ecohealth. 2010;7(1):105-113. doi:10.1007/s10393-010-0299-9. Click image below to read full article online:

Click on the image below to read the Abstract for the PhD dissertation: “Historical Influences on the Development of Indigenous Jamaican Maroon Ethnomedicine: Comparisons with West African and Arawak Ethnopharmacopoeia” (A collaborative project between Jamaican Maroon Healers and Ghanaian Healers led by Dr. Summer Austin Ragosta, Ethnobotanist Surfing Medicine International):

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