Public Health and Traditional Medicine: An intercultural perspective from Ecuador
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Balance Works swiftly adapted to create and host a dynamic, Ecuador-based public health program, offering students critical insights into health systems during a global crisis.
Through a combination of academic seminars and field-based learning, students explored Ecuador’s public healthcare system, the social determinants of health, and the real-time impacts of COVID-19 on healthcare delivery, policy, and social equity.
A parallel seminar deepened understanding of traditional medicine, indigenous health practices, and the evolving integration of intercultural health models. Students engaged directly with rural communities, health practitioners, and indigenous leaders, analyzing how pandemic dynamics reshaped both biomedical and traditional health landscapes.
Balance Works delivered a timely, place-based educational experience that empowered students to critically examine public health through multiple lenses — biomedical, traditional, and community-driven — at a moment of profound global change.
- Place-Based Learning and Systems Thinking:
Our programs merge in-country fieldwork with critical systemic analysis. Through site visits, homestays, and dialogue with grassroots leaders, scholars, and practitioners, students engage deeply with the socio-environmental dynamics shaping Ecuador’s future.
- Experiential Education with Purpose:
BalanceWorks doesn’t just host a program — we deliver a living ecosystem for experiential learning, rooted in meaningful partnerships and transformational practice.


