keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38704822/personal-and-organisational-health-literacy-in-the-non-specific-symptom-pathway-for-cancer-an-ethnographic-study
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Georgia B Black, Julie-Ann Moreland, Naomi J Fulop, Georgios Lyratzopoulos, Brian D Nicholson, Katriina L Whitaker
INTRODUCTION: People being investigated for cancer face a wealth of complex information. Non-specific symptom pathways (NSS) were implemented in the United Kingdom in 2017 to address the needs of patients experiencing symptoms such as weight loss, fatigue or general practitioner 'gut feeling', who did not have streamlined pathways for cancer investigation. This study aimed to explore the health literacy skills needed by patients being investigated for cancer in NSS pathways. METHODS: This study employed ethnographic methods across four hospitals in England, including interviews, patient shadowing and clinical care observations, to examine NSS pathways for cancer diagnosis...
June 2024: Health Expectations: An International Journal of Public Participation in Health Care and Health Policy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38703461/the-changing-relationship-between-bodyweight-and-longevity-in-high-and-low-income-countries
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joanna Kopinska, Vincenzo Atella, Jay Bhattacharya, Grant Miller
Standard measures of bodyweight (overweight and obese, for example) fail to reflect differences across populations and technological progress over time. This paper builds on the pioneering work of Hans Waaler (1984) and Robert Fogel (1994) to empirically estimate how the relationship between body mass index (BMI) and longevity varies across high-, middle-, and low-income countries. Importantly, we show that these differences are so profound that the share of national populations above mortality-minimizing bodyweight is not clearly greater in countries with higher overweight and obesity rates (as traditionally defined)-and in fact, relative to current standards, a larger share of low-income countries' populations can be unhealthily heavy...
April 24, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38703460/association-of-cigarette-smoking-with-changes-in-macroeconomic-conditions
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samuel Asare
This study uses data from the 1987-2022 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System and state-level employment rates from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics to estimate the association between macroeconomic conditions and cigarette smoking. Our finding suggests a positive association, which constantly declined with time after the 2001 recession. We find that a one percentage point increase in the employment rate is associated with a 1.4% higher likelihood of smoking cigarettes in the overall sample but declined to 0...
April 29, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38693439/making-things-specific-towards-an-anthropology-of-everyday-ethics-in-healthcare
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jeannette Pols
This paper is the English translation and adaptation of my inaugural lecture in Amsterdam for the Chair Anthropology of Everyday Ethics in Health Care. I argue that the challenges in health care may look daunting and unsolvable in their scale and complexity, but that it helps to consider these problems in their specificity, while accepting that some problems may not be solved but have become chronic. The paper provides reflections on how to develop a scientific approach that does not aim to eradicate bad things but explores ways in which to live with them...
May 1, 2024: Medicine, Health Care, and Philosophy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38686155/seeing-with-different-eyes-the-module-life-science-of-the-elite-master-program-biomedical-neuroscience
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Moritz Schumm, Daniel Teufel, Michael Brunnhuber, Marjo Wijnen-Meijer, Pascal O Berberat
From its beginnings in 2018, the international elite-master program Biomedical Neuroscience of TUM School of Medicine and Health at Technical University of Munich was guided by two convictions: First, excellent research depends not only on the mediation of scientific knowledge and skills, but also on a multifaceted understanding of science itself. Second, teaching must recognize and support not only student's growing expertise but also their personal and professional development. To this end, the module Life & Science was designed...
April 2024: Medical Science Educator
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38649267/mental-health-subjective-experiences-and-environmental-change
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Juan Manuel Zaragoza Bernal
This article responds to Coope's call for the medical humanities to address the climate crisis as a health issue. Coope proposes three areas for progress towards ecological thinking in healthcare, with a focus on ecological mental health. The article emphasises the need to understand the cultural dimensions of mental health and proposes an interdisciplinary approach that integrates insights from the arts and humanities. It examines the impact of climate change on mental health, drawing on The Rockefeller Foundation - Lancet Commission on Planetary Health and recent studies...
April 22, 2024: Medical Humanities
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38648699/race-immunity-and-lifespan-unraveling-the-effect-of-early-life-exposure-to-malaria-risk-on-lifespan
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sok Chul Hong, Inhyuk Hwang
We investigate a historical experience to measure the long-term effect of malaria on lifespan among infected survivors and identify a factor that mitigates malaria's effect. Using a sample of Union Army veterans born during the mid-19th century and their lifetime records, we show that exposure to high risk of malaria at birth or in early life substantially shortened their lifespan. The legacy of exposure to malaria is robust while controlling for lifetime socioeconomic and health conditions, fixed effects, and considering selection bias...
April 12, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645783/association-of-hla-c-07-359-with-hla-a-b-and-drb1-alleles-in-taiwanese
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kuo-Liang Yang, Py-Yu Lin
OBJECTIVES: It is thought that Taiwanese indigenous people were the "first people" to populate Taiwan (Formosa) having been there for over 5000 years, preceding the Dutch colonization (from 1624 to 1662) and Spanish colonization (from 1626 to 1642). Taiwan's indigenes, represented by Austronesian language speakers, currently constitute approximately 2% of the total population in Taiwan. It is unknown whether they evolved from Taiwan's Paleolithic or Neolithic cultures, arrived during or after the Neolithic period from China or Southeast Asia or both...
2024: Tzu chi medical journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38642450/does-facial-structure-explain-differences-in-student-evaluations-of-teaching-the-role-of-fwhr-as-a-proxy-for-perceived-dominance
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Valentina Paredes, Francisco J Pino, David Díaz
Dominance is usually viewed as a positive male attribute, but this is not typically the case for women. Using a novel dataset of student evaluations of teaching in a school of Business and Economics of a selective university, we construct the face width-to-height ratio (fWHR) as a proxy for perceived dominance to assess whether individuals with a higher ratio obtain better evaluations. Our results show that a higher fWHR is associated with a better evaluation for male faculty, while the opposite is the case for female faculty...
April 16, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38642372/-they-think-we-wear-loincloths-spatial-stigma-coloniality-and-physician-migration-in-puerto-rico
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mark Padilla, Nelson Varas-Diaz, Sheilla Rodríguez-Madera, John Vertovec, Joshua Rivera-Custodio, Kariela Rivera-Bustelo, Claudia Mercado-Rios, Armando Matiz-Reyes, Adrian Santiago-Santiago, Yoymar González-Font, Alixida Ramos-Pibernus, Kevin Grove
Puerto Rico (PR) is facing an unprecedented healthcare crisis due to accelerating migration of physicians to the mainland United States (US), leaving residents with diminishing healthcare and excessively long provider wait times. While scholars and journalists have identified economic factors driving physician migration, our study analyzes the effects of spatial stigma within the broader context of coloniality as unexamined dimensions of physician loss. Drawing on 50 semi-structured interviews with physicians throughout PR and the US, we identified how stigmatizing meanings are attached to PR, its people, and its biomedical system, often incorporating colonial notions of the island's presumed backwardness, lagging medical technology, and lack of cutting-edge career opportunities...
April 20, 2024: Medical Anthropology Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38642363/the-study-of-dental-status-through-determination-of-the-degree-of-preservation-of-paleoanthropological-material
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lyudmyla Kaskova, Nataliia V Yanko, Andrii Artemyev, Olha Andriyanova
OBJECTIVE: Aim: To introduce a simple classification system for the degree of preservation and quality of the dentoalveolar apparatus into scientific circulation to further investigate dental diseases in ancestral populations.. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Materials and Methods: The sample analyzed consisted of the remains of 499 individuals from the human populations that existed in the territories of Ukraine from the Copper Age to the Bronze Age. Teeth and jaws were examined macroscopically under bright light; dental changes were evaluated by probing...
2024: Polski Merkuriusz Lekarski: Organ Polskiego Towarzystwa Lekarskiego
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38640225/-the-birthing-chair-obstetric-bed-and-gynecological-chair-in-obstetrics-and-gynecology-in-russia-of-xviii-xx-centuries
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
N A Mitsyuk, V N Pokusaeva
The purpose of the study is to investigate material culture of obstetrics in New and Modern history of Russia. The most important objective of research is to involve into scientific circulation Russian empirical material in order to study transformation of culture of childbirth during transition from traditional to biomedical model of childbirth exemplified by material culture items (maternity beds, chairs, armchairs). The key approaches were those of historical anthropology, social history of medicine, theory of social control and medicalization...
March 2024: Problemy Sot︠s︡ialʹnoĭ Gigieny, Zdravookhranenii︠a︡ i Istorii Medit︠s︡iny
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38634327/three-dimensional-reconstruction-of-king-henri-iv-s-paranasal-sinuses-and-mastoid-cells
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robin Baudouin, Angélique Amelot, Isabelle Huynh-Charlier, Quentin Lisan, Stéphane Hans, Philippe Charlier
PURPOSE: The preserved head of King Henri IV of France (life 1553-1610, reign 1589-1610) has survived to the present day thanks to high-quality embalming and favorable conservation conditions. The aim of this study was to examine Henry IV's upper resonant cavities and mastoids using an original and innovative forensic three-dimensional segmentation method. METHODS: The paranasal sinuses and mastoid cells of King Henri IV of France were studied by cross-referencing available biographical information with clinical and flexible endoscopic examination and computed tomography (CT-scan) imaging...
April 18, 2024: Clinical Anatomy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38630020/the-woman-is-the-active-agent-general-practitioners-and-the-agentive-displacement-of-abortion-in-ireland
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brenna McCaffrey
After the legalization of abortion in 2018, Ireland needed clinicians to become abortion providers and make this political win a medical reality. Yet Irish doctors had next-to-no training in abortion care, and barriers ranging from stigma to economic pressures in the healthcare system impacted doctors' desire to volunteer. How did hundreds of Irish doctors make the shift from family doctor to abortion provider? Drawing on ethnographic research conducted between 2017 and 2020, this article explores the process by which Irish general practitioners became abortion providers, attending to the material impact of medical technologies on that journey...
April 17, 2024: Medical Anthropology Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626350/birthing-hostages-haitian-women-s-stories-of-maternal-medicine-debt-and-hospital-detention
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alissa Jordan
What does it mean that hospitals in Haiti have become widespread sites of "kidnapping" for mothers and babies? In at least 46 countries, including Haiti, indebted patients are extralegally held prisoner in hospitals until family members, kin, outside groups, or charities pay their outstanding bills. The majority of those detained globally are women following complicated births. This article introduces and situates the global problem of "hospital detention" as it is practiced in Haiti, tying it to transnational architectures that target Black reproduction in global health...
April 16, 2024: Medical Anthropology Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38626326/language-in-bioethics-beyond-the-representational-view
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Justin T Clapp, Jacqueline M Kruser, Margaret L Schwarze, Rachel A Hadler
Though assumptions about language underlie all bioethical work, the field has rarely partaken of theories of language. This article encourages a more linguistically engaged bioethics. We describe the tacit conception of language that is frequently upheld in bioethics-what we call the representational view , which sees language essentially as a means of description. We examine how this view has routed the field's theories and interventions down certain paths. We present an alternative model of language-the pragmatic view -and explore how it expands and clarifies traditional bioethical concerns...
April 16, 2024: American Journal of Bioethics: AJOB
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38614976/an-anthropological-history-of-nepal-s-female-community-health-volunteer-program-gender-policy-and-social-change
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Roosa Sofia Tikkanen, Svea Closser, Justine Prince, Priyankar Chand, Judith Justice
BACKGROUND: Community health workers (CHWs) are central to Primary Health Care globally. Amidst the current flourishing of work on CHWs, there often is a lack of reference to history-even in studies of programs that have been around for decades. This study examines the 35-year trajectory of Nepal's Female Community Health Volunteers (FCHVs). METHODS: We conducted a content analysis of an archive of primary and secondary research materials, grey literature and government reports collected during 1977-2019 across several regions in Nepal...
April 13, 2024: International Journal for Equity in Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38613984/left-digit-bias-in-self-reported-height
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hyunkuk Cho
Left-digit bias is a cognitive bias wherein individuals assess the magnitude of numbers by emphasizing the leftmost digit. For instance, people often perceive the difference between $9.99 and $10.00 larger than that between $10.00 and $10.01, given the distinct left digits in the former two numbers. This study associates self-reported height with this cognitive bias. Taller stature is frequently associated with desirable attributes such as higher earnings and leadership positions; individuals may aspire to be taller and, consequently, report a height greater than their actual measurement...
April 10, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38613625/validation-and-recalibration-of-sex-estimation-methods-using-pubic-nonmetric-traits-for-the-chilean-population
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Natalia Rojas González, Zuzana Obertová, Daniel Franklin
Chile had a violent military coup (1973-1990) that resulted in 3,000 victims declared detained, missing or killed; many are still missing and unidentified. Currently, the Human Rights Unit of the Forensic Medical Service in Chile applies globally recognised forensic anthropological approaches, but many of these methods have not been validated in a Chilean sample. As current research has demonstrated population-specificity with extant methods, the present study aims to validate sex estimation methods in a Chilean population and thereafter establish population-specific equations...
April 13, 2024: International Journal of Legal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38593608/the-effect-of-actual-and-expected-income-shocks-on-mental-wellbeing-evidence-from-three-east-asian-countries-during-covid-19
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Akbar Zamanzadeh, Tony Cavoli, Matina Ghasemi, Ladan Rokni
This paper evaluates the effects of economic shocks to current and expected income reduction on mental wellbeing. We use individual-level data from three East Asian countries; China, Japan, and South Korea, during the early phases of the pandemic when the COVID-induced economic shocks were severe. The findings reveal significant causal effects from current and expected income reduction on different aspects of mental health deterioration, including anxiety, trouble sleeping, boredom, and loneliness. Interestingly, we found that expectations of future income loss have a significantly larger effect on people's mental wellbeing compared to current falls in income...
March 29, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
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