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Definition
- The application of anthropological theories and methods to question of health, illness, medicine and healing.
- Medicine is not simply an applied science
- contemporary medical anthropology: Ecology and evolution- behavioral and biological adaptation
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Term
Historical Antecedence of medical anthropology |
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Definition
4 historical antecedence
- biological anthropology
- Early ethnographic fieldwork
- studies of "national characters" and deviance
- international public health movement: the importance of understanding peoples culture; taking westernized medical sanitation but was not successful. example: the teaching of boiling water before drinking it.
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Term
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Definition
- Aspect of cultural system concerns with sickness and healing in integrated ways; not solely scientific and material but also ideational; such as: (1) individual experiences, (2) knowledge, meaning, practice, (3) social, political, economical aspects, (4) environment, ecology
- ethnomedicine draws distinction between the traditional system and scientific system (biomedicine is exempt from this scrutiny), this category was set up to opposition our system.
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Definition
- exposer to infection at a early age is actually protective in term of future allergic diseases
- being exposed to infection will produce T1 cells in which will suppress the T2 cells from attacking allergens
- autoimmune disorders as a result of being too clean
- examples: Kids who live on farms, and go to daycare have least allergies, first born child is most likely to have asthma.
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Term
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Definition
- Deaf- profound hearing loss, so sever that amplification does not help; are individuals who identify themselves as being apart of the deaf community
- view deafness as a difference rather than a disability, they are proud and happy of their deafness and would not chose to be hearing.
- deaf- refers to everyone with a profound hearing loss, but seek out to find away to be hearing again, and use oral English.
- ASL is the third most used language in the U.S.
- A deaf child must learn a language by the age of 3
- Socioeconomic impact: lower than the average hearing person
- "Blindness cuts you from objects, but deafness cuts you from people
- Film: Sound and Furry
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Term
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Definition
- health: is not merely to the absence of disease, but a state of physical, social and psychological well-being
- Illness: incorporates the experience of the suffers perception of alternations in health informed by broader social and cultural meaning
- Disease: formal, professional category
- Illness without disease
- disease without illness
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Term
Yanomamo-Brazil and Venezuela |
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Definition
- measles outbreak
- lived in small villages, they believed when contract from outside people they would be exposed to the measles
- 94% were never exposed to the measles
- Epidemic: dry season(traveled only during the dry season b/c couldn't during the wet season): traveled to mission ports, feasting, raiding, trading, exposed at mission ports and infected others during the incubating period
- they believed that all parts of the dead must be destroyed to be able to move on to the next world
- they also believed that spirits were causing the disease, when they saw that the disease was spreading they would curl up and hide in their hamks
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Term
Humoral Medicine: Classical Greek Medicine |
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Definition
- 4 Humors and corresponding elements
- blood: hot and wet; like air; spring
- phlegm: cold and wet; like water; Winter
- Yellow Bile/Choler: hot and dry; like fire; summer
- Black Bile/Melancholy: cold and dry; like earth; Fall
tied to seasons and temperaments
diagnoses imbalance,prescribe treatment to restore balance
Balance=Healthy
Imbalance=Illness |
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Term
Domain/Socialization/Arena |
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Definition
Domain: content of knowledge and practice
Socialization: the teaching of the domain
Arena: the place in which the activities are conducted |
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Term
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Definition
- is the removal section of bone from the skull, which removes evil spirits, illness, etc.
- was the health care and medical knowledge of the Neandethrals
- was used to treat skull fractures, epilepsy,and was used to liberate the soul in the body, to lead spirits out of the head, and treated wounds.
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Term
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Definition
- includes infanticide, geronticide, sacrifices, and warfare- killing as a result of social constructs
- western culture prefers to have a have a quick painless death where as eastern culture prefer to have a longer illness
- it is unholy to have a quick painless death
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Term
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Definition
Witches: power within them, identified by accusation
Sorcerers: proclaim their power, markable skills (evil)
Shaman: religious/traditional healers, treat illness by enter the supernatural world, altered state of consciousness, possession, they must do a well job or will be accused of being a sorcerer. mordern shamans incorporate more westernized medicine in their practice
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Term
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Definition
- Traditional chinese medicine; focus on vital energy, energy flow affects well-being, must be balanced.
- QI: vital life force, blocked QI causes illness
- Yin and Yang: primordial element: interdependent opposites
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Term
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Definition
- Hmong believe that illness is caused by soul loss
- The spirits can take the soul/souls can be scared out of the body
- Healing practices involve getting the soul back or balancing the soul
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Term
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Definition
- a society's customs and ideas should be described objectively and understood in the context of that society
- analytical position
- does not approve or disapprove of different cultures
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Term
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Definition
is the tendency to believe that one's own ethnic or cultural group is centrally important, and that all other groups are measured in relation to one's own |
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Term
Explanatory Models (EMS)/Arthur Kleinman |
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Definition
- Arthur Kleinman- a physician and anthropologist
- He introduced the Explanatory Model- is the notion about an episode of those engaged in clinical process
- EMS are held by both patients (and families) and practitioners
- EMS explains causes, symptoms, pathophysiology, natural hisotry, severity, and treatment
- "Klienman's 8"- Faudiman called Klienman, while working on his book, he asked him to explain Lia Lee's EMS, he responds: if we believe in our biomedical system how do you expect someone who has a different believe/health culture to believe ours.
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Term
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Definition
- She was interested in the immune system and how people viewed the immune system
- she interviewed 3 people:
- biomedical Scientist- military metaphor
- Complementary/alternative healers- immune system key to their modality
- "Lay" People: their perspective was balance. when they were asked to draw a picture of the immune system they drew dancers
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Term
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Definition
Active, purposeful intervention of a sensate agent
Supernatural: God
Nonhuman being: ghost, ancestor, evil spirits
Human being: witches, sorcerers
The point of this system is that you do something to harm one of these people to deserve your illness |
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Term
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Definition
Impersonal, functional, systematic, equilibrium
Balance=Health
Imbalance=Illness
Example: Humoral System |
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Term
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Definition
The study of disease in ancient populations |
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Term
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Definition
Fore word for the symptoms typical of sheet with scrapie, includes trembling and basic degeneration of the bones |
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Term
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Definition
represent a case study that examines both biological and cultural causes of disease
They were affected by an illness called KURU, which is a wasting of the muscles which affects the brain
they couldn't explain it genetically, so they called in a biological anthropologist who said that the disease looks a lot like scrapie which is found in sheep
they practiced MORTUARY CANNIBALISM, part of preparing the body is ingesting parts of it (and only women do it)
-basically, people getting scrapie, how this biological disorder affects them due to their culture
(interaction between biology and culture)
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Term
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Definition
A disease typically found in sheep that members of the Fore Tribe were being infected with by the way of Mortuary Cannibalism. |
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Term
Categories of illness causation |
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Definition
3 persepectives:
magical- illness results from magical manipulation of force through witchcraft and sorcery.
Religious- illness controlled by supernatural powers
naturalistic-illness subject to natural law
Illness Causation:
witchcraft and sorcery
breach of taboo
disease-object intrusion
spirit intrusion
soul loss
imbalance |
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Term
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Definition
Interconnectedness, interdependence
Different healing styles influence one another |
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Term
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Definition
public, formal, autobiographical illness narrative
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Term
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Definition
Language of Epidemiology
Language of clinical biomedicine
Lay Language |
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Term
Pingelap- the island of the colorblind
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Definition
island in the Pacific ocean in which many of the inhabitants are colorblind.
There was a terrible storm with few survivors. One was colorblind and after generations of inbreeding the number of colorblind people greatly increased.
Achromatopsia- a vision disorder
they have good night vision and wear sunglasses during the day |
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Term
Complementary/Alternative/Integrative Medicine |
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Definition
Complementary Medicine: is the practice of medicine that combines traditional and alternative medicine
Alternative Medicine: spiritual healing; nonwestern medicine
Integrative Medicine: is a practice of medicine that reaffirms the importance of relationship between practitioners and patient and focuses on the whole person |
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Term
recruitment, selection, and identification of healers |
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Definition
self-selection
selection by circumstance (pre-destination, disability/deformity, miraculous survival, inheritance of role)
Selection by others (community members, supernatural) |
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Term
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Definition
Health and disease as reflection of relationships (within a population, between population, among the physical component of a habitat) |
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Term
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Definition
how cultural beliefs and practices shape human behavior and adaptation
Example:cultural practice in Vietnam aimed at avoiding Malaria (they built their houses on stills), cultural practice allows them to avoid disease |
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Term
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Definition
Effects of political conflict, economics and resource inequality
Example:Malaria has different distributions in different places based on SES, wealthy people don't get it |
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