keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38451485/testing-care-and-morality-everyday-testing-during-covid-19-in-denmark
#41
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charlotte Nørholm, Jens Seeberg, Andreas Roepstorff, Mette Terp Høybye
COVID-testing was central to control the spread of infection in Denmark. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, we show that testing was not just a diagnostic sign; it was also a biosocial practice that enacted a public health morality, centered on responsibility, care, and belonging. We argue that testing led to a public healthicization of everyday life, as it moralized individual and collective behavior and created a moral divide between the tested and the untested. By attending to COVID-19 testing as a material-semiotic sign, we show how testing is embedded within a particular cultural and moral framework of the Danish welfare state...
March 7, 2024: Medical Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38447319/the-great-indian-demonetization-and-gender-gap-in-health-outcomes-evidence-from-two-indian-states
#42
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Md Nazmul Ahsan, Sounak Thakur
We utilize the timing of India's 2016 demonetization policy to examine whether a negative macroeconomic shock disproportionately affects women's health outcomes relative to men's. Our empirical framework considers women as the treated group and men as the comparison group. Using data from the National Family Health Survey-4 and a household fixed effects model, we find that the induced income shock leads to a 4% decline in hemoglobin for women as compared to the pre-demonetization level. This corresponds to a 21% increase in the gender gap in hemoglobin...
February 29, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38447082/tackling-the-unknown-medical-semiotics-of-inflammation-and-their-legal-epistemological-boundaries-in-brazil
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Márcio Vilar
Do different medico-scientific understandings of autoimmune inflammation, whose carriers disobediently promote the therapeutic use of immunostimulants, have the potential to destabilize the hegemony of the standard palliative treatment based on immunosuppression? Here I explore whether and how medical paradigms in Brazil develop and expand around immunopathologies through practices of exclusion and inclusion in the context of global circulation of knowledges, therapies, and regulatory frameworks. While focusing on concurrent immunotherapeutic models within biomedicine, I discuss aspects of legal-epistemological frictions that animate controversies in which distinct ways of co-producing medical evidence affect and are affected by the biomedical establishment...
March 6, 2024: Medical Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38446092/becoming-a-neuro-migrant-haitian-migration-translation-and-subjectivation-in-santiago-chile
#44
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gabriel Abarca-Brown
Based on a multi-sited ethnography conducted over 14 months in northern Santiago, I examine how the introduction of a series of health policies and the global mental health agenda has interacted with and impacted Haitian migrants in the context of a postdictatorship neoliberal Chile (1990-2019). Specifically, I explore the interactions between health and social institutions, mental health practitioners, psy technologies, and Haitian migrants, highlighting migrants' subjectivation processes and everyday life...
March 6, 2024: Medical Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38444238/what-does-it-mean-to-be-human-today
#45
REVIEW
Julia Alessandra Harzheim
With the progress of artificial intelligence, the digitalization of the lifeworld, and the reduction of the mind to neuronal processes, the human being appears more and more as a product of data and algorithms. Thus, we conceive ourselves "in the image of our machines," and conversely, we elevate our machines and our brains to new subjects. At the same time, demands for an enhancement of human nature culminate in transhumanist visions of taking human evolution to a new stage. Against this self-reification of the human being, the present book defends a humanism of embodiment: our corporeality, vitality, and embodied freedom are the foundations of a self-determined existence, which uses the new technologies only as means instead of submitting to them...
March 6, 2024: Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics: CQ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38442635/do-conditional-cash-transfers-reduce-hypertension
#46
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emma Aguila, William H Dow, Felipe Menares, Susan W Parker, Jorge Peniche, Soomin Ryu
Progresa, an anti-poverty conditional cash transfer program, has been a model for similar programs in more than 60 countries. Numerous studies have found positive impacts on schooling, the nutritional and health status of children and adolescents, and household consumption. However, the effects on the health of older adult beneficiaries have been particularly understudied. In this paper we analyze the effects of Progresa on middle-aged and older adult health, focusing on a high prevalence chronic condition: hypertension...
February 16, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38441252/the-history-of-the-vienna-protocol-on-dealing-with-holocaust-era-human-remains-and-its-resonance-with-ethical-considerations-in-african-american-bioarcheology
#47
REVIEW
Sabine Hildebrandt
The Vienna Protocol on How to Deal with Holocaust Era Human Remains describes what to do when possibly Jewish human remains are found. Based on Jewish medical ethics, it responds to the 2014-2017 discoveries of human remains stemming from biomedical contexts of the Nazi period. Among the finding sites were the Dahlem campus of the Free University of Berlin, the Medical University of Strasbourg, and Max Planck Institute archives. The Vienna Protocol is unique among similar recommendations on Nazi era human remains in its representation of the voices of those who suffered violence and were targeted as victims by Nazi persecution...
March 5, 2024: American journal of biological anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38437012/expanding-medical-semiotics
#48
EDITORIAL
R S Andersen, M T Høybye, M B Risør
This special issue explores the evolving landscape of medical semiotics of conventional biomedicine. With expansion we refer to the range of phenomena considered signs or symptoms of underlying disease, but also the growing anthropological attention to the medical sign system in ways which reach beyond classic semiotic analysis. The articles testify to the expansion in terms of empirical foci and theoretical contributions. As part of the introduction, we discuss three modes of reading symptoms within medical anthropology: the hermeneutic, material, and critical readings, all highlighting the crucial role of medical anthropology in understanding the biosocial and cultural dimensions of medical semiotics...
March 4, 2024: Medical Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38436972/relational-harm-on-the-divisive-effects-of-global-health-volunteering-at-a-hospital-in-rural-zambia
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
James Wintrup
Drawing on ethnographic research at a hospital in rural Zambia, I show how the presence of white Christian medical volunteers from the United States damaged relations between local health workers and patients. Working from a position of economic and racial privilege, medical volunteers received praise from many patients and residents. However, these positive attitudes incited resentment among many Zambian health workers who felt that their own efforts and expertise were being undervalued or ignored. Focusing on these disrupted relationships, I argue that it is crucial to understand how global health volunteering can produce enduring forms of "relational harm"...
March 4, 2024: Medical Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38430873/extra-ordinary-medicine-toward-an-anthropology-of-primary-care
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alissa Bernstein Sideman, Na'amah Razon
Primary care is at the forefront of healthcare delivery. It is the site of disease prevention and health management and serves as the bridge between communities and the health care system As ethnographers of primary care, in this article we discuss what is gained by situating anthropological inquiry within primary care. We articulate how anthropologists can contribute to a better understanding of the issues that emerge in primary care. We provide a review of anthropological work in primary care and offer empirical data from two ethnographic case studies based in the United States, one focused on social risk screening in primary care and the other examining the diagnosis and care of people with dementia in primary care...
February 20, 2024: Social Science & Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38430162/analysis-of-magnetic-resonance-imaging-with-chemical-exchange-saturation-transfer-in-glioma-a-medical-anthropology-perspective
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Min Zhang
BACKGROUND: Medical anthropology plays a crucial role in understanding health, disease, and treatment within contemporary anthropology. As the incidence of tumors rises, with cancer posing a significant threat to human health, particularly malignant brain tumors, such as glioma, the need for accurate preoperative diagnosis and effective treatment strategies is paramount. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to review the literature on the advancements in medical anthropology and innovative medical technologies to enhance preoperative diagnostics, guide treatment strategies, and ultimately improve the survival rates and quality of life for glioma patients...
March 1, 2024: Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38428380/secular-trends-and-regional-pattern-in-body-height-of-austrian-conscripts-born-between-1961-and-2002
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sylvia Kirchengast, Thomas Waldhör, Alfred Juan, Lin Yang
The human growth process is influenced not only by genetic factors but also by environmental factors. Therefore, regional differences in mean body heights may exist within a population or a state. In the present study, we described and evaluated the regional trends in mean body heights in the nine Austrian provinces over a period spanning more than four decades. Body height data of 1734569 male conscripts born in Austria with Austrian citizenship between 1961 and 2002 were anonymized and analyzed. From 1961 to 2002 birth cohorts, an overall increase in the mean body height of Austrian recruits was observed, although regional differences were evident...
February 17, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38424564/contribution-of-hla-class-i-a-b-c-and-hla-class-ii-drb1-dqa1-dqb1-alleles-and-haplotypes-in-exploring-ethnic-origin-of-central-tunisians
#53
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Amène Ben Bnina, Amri Yessine, Yasmine El Bahri, Saoussen Chouchene, Nada Ben Lazrek, Mariem Mimouna, Zeineb Mlika, Aziza Messoudi, Dorsaf Zellama, Wissal Sahtout, Amina Bouatay
BACKGROUND: Estimation of HLA (Human leukocyte Antigen) alleles' frequencies in populations is essential to explore their ethnic origin. Anthropologic studies of central Tunisian population were rarely reported. Then, in this work, we aimed to explore the origin of central Tunisian population using HLA alleles and haplotypes frequencies. METHODS: HLA class I (A, B, C) and HLA class II (DRB1, DQA1, DQB1) loci genotyping of 272 healthy unrelated organ donors was performed by Polymerase Chain Reaction-Sequence Specific Oligonucleotide (PCR-SSO)...
February 29, 2024: BMC Medical Genomics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38416990/a-pandemic-of-metrics
#54
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vincanne Adams, Clare Chandler, Ann H Kelly, Julie Livingston
The COVID-19 pandemic prompted critical attention to the performative power of metrics. We suggest that the existential capacities of metrics as a means of pandemic living warrant further consideration. We describe how the COVID-19 pandemic that came into existence as a public health and political event could only have occurred because of the anticipatory metrical practices that were used to transform SARS-COV-2 into a matter of global health concern. By exploring the affective potencies of COVID-19 metrics we show their abilities to engage the public in ways that cannot be contained; in detailing the narrative arcs created through metrics we show their opportunities, misdirections, and erasures...
February 28, 2024: Medical Anthropology Quarterly
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38412694/relative-leg-to-arm-skeletal-strength-proportions-in-orangutans-by-species-and-sex
#55
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexandra E Kralick, Babette S Zemel, Clara Nolan, Phillip Lin, Matthew W Tocheri
Among extant great apes, orangutans climb most frequently. However, Bornean orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus) exhibit higher frequencies of terrestrial locomotion than do Sumatran orangutans (Pongo abelii). Variation in long bone cross-sectional geometry is known to reflect differential loading of the limbs. Thus, Bornean orangutans should show greater relative leg-to-arm strength than their Sumatran counterparts. Using skeletal specimens from museum collections, we measured two cross-sectional geometric measures of bone strength: the polar section modulus (Zpol) and the ratio of maximum to minimum area moments of inertia (Imax/Imin), at the midshaft of long bones in Bornean (n = 19) and Sumatran adult orangutans (n = 12) using medical CT and peripheral quantitative CT scans, and compared results to published data of other great apes...
February 26, 2024: Journal of Human Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38410056/politics-law-and-a-lack-of-sperm-single-women-and-fertility-treatment-in-the-swedish-health-system
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rachel Irwin
In 2016 Swedish law was amended to allow single women to access fertility treatment with donor sperm. In this paper, based on interviews, document analysis and autoethnographic insights, I examine the implementation of this law using human rights approaches, specifically the availability, accessibility, acceptability, and quality framework (AAAQ Framework). While the law extended the scope of reproductive rights, the health system was unprepared. Five years on, women seek care in the private sector or continue to travel abroad due in large part to waiting times which can be up to four years in some regions...
February 27, 2024: Anthropology & Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38409039/the-influence-of-exotic-and-native-plants-on-illnesses-with-physical-and-spiritual-causes-in-the-semiarid-region-of-piau%C3%A3-northeast-of-brazil
#57
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paulo Henrique da Silva, Washington Soares Ferreira Júnior, Sofia Zank, André Luiz Borba do Nascimento, Maria Carolina de Abreu
BACKGROUND: Local medical systems (LMS) include native and exotic plants used for the treatment of diseases of physical and spiritual nature. The incorporation of exotic plants into these systems has been the subject of many studies. In this context, an analysis was conducted on the influence of the origin of plants on diseases of physical and spiritual nature in order to evaluate the therapeutic versatility of native and exotic species in these therapeutic targets, to investigate whether exotic plants mainly fill gaps not met by native plants (diversification hypothesis), and identify which species are prioritized in the redundant targets in these two therapeutic groups in the rural community of Morrinhos, Monsenhor Hipólito, Piauí...
February 26, 2024: Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38404895/determination-of-the-radioanatomical-factors-related-to-the-position-of-facial-nerve-in-accessing-jugular-foramen-and-carotid-artery-in-temporal-bone
#58
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Parisadat Ahmadi, Mohammad Ali Kazemi, Nasrin Yazdani, Sasan Dabiri
INTRODUCTION: Preservation of the facial nerve is of great importance in temporal bone surgeries. We intend to investigate the measurements of the radioanatomical factors related to the position of the facial nerve in accessing jugular foramen and internal carotid artery (ICA) in temporal bone of patients who were candidates for temporal high resolution computed tomography (HRCT) scan. METHODS: In this correlation cross-sectional study, samples were selected from patients referred to Amir Alam Hospital who were previously candidates for temporal HRCT...
February 29, 2024: Heliyon
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38397184/a-new-tool-for-probabilistic-assessment-of-mps-data-associated-with-mtdna-mixtures
#59
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer A McElhoe, Alyssa Addesso, Brian Young, Mitchell M Holland
Mitochondrial (mt) DNA plays an important role in the fields of forensic and clinical genetics, molecular anthropology, and population genetics, with mixture interpretation being of particular interest in medical and forensic genetics. The high copy number, haploid state (only a single haplotype contributed per individual), high mutation rate, and well-known phylogeny of mtDNA, makes it an attractive marker for mixture deconvolution in damaged and low quantity samples of all types. Given the desire to deconvolute mtDNA mixtures, the goals of this study were to (1) create a new software, MixtureAceMT™, to deconvolute mtDNA mixtures by assessing and combining two existing software tools, MixtureAce™ and Mixemt, (2) create a dataset of in-silico MPS mixtures from whole mitogenome haplotypes representing a diverse set of population groups, and consisting of two and three contributors at different dilution ratios, and (3) since amplicon targeted sequencing is desirable, and is a commonly used approach in forensic laboratories, create biological mixture data associated with two amplification kits: PowerSeq™ Whole Genome Mito (Promega™, Madison, WI, USA) and Precision ID mtDNA Whole Genome Panel (Thermo Fisher Scientific by AB™, Waltham, MA, USA) to further validate the software for use in forensic laboratories...
January 31, 2024: Genes
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38395900/ethnobotanical-study-of-medicinal-plants-used-by-the-yi-people-in-mile-yunnan-china
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hongrui Li, Caiwen Huang, Yanhong Li, Pujing Wang, Jingxian Sun, Zizhen Bi, Shisheng Xia, Yong Xiong, Xishan Bai, Xiangzhong Huang
BACKGROUND: The Yi people are a sociolinguistic group living in Mile City, which is their typical settlement in southeastern Yunnan, China. Over the long history of using medicinal plants, the Yi people have accumulated and developed a wealth of traditional medicinal knowledge, which has played a vital role in their health care. However, only a few studies have been performed to systematically document the medicinal plants commonly used by the Yi people. This study provides fundamental data for the development and application of ethnomedicine as well as supports the conservation of the traditional medical knowledge of the Yi people...
February 23, 2024: Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine
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