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A Companion to Medical Anthropology


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M.L., Castillo-Burguete, M.T., Varela-Silva, I., and Dickinson, F. (2014). Globalization and children’s diets: The case of Maya of Mexico and Central America. Anthropological Review 77: 11–32.

      14 Brave Heart, M.Y.H. and DeBruyn, L.M. (1998). The American Indian holocaust: Healing historical unresolved grief. American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research 8 (2): 56–78.

      15 Brewis, A.A., Piperata, B., Thompson, A.L., and Wutich, A. (2020). Localizing resource insecurities: A biocultural perspective on water and wellbeing. WIREs Water 7(4): e1440-1450.

      16 Brewis, A. and Wutich, A. (2014). A world of suffering? Biocultural approaches to fat stigma in the global contexts of the obesity epidemic. Annals of Anthropological Practice 38: 269–283.

      17 Brewis, A. and Wutich, A. (2019). Lazy, Crazy and Disgusting: Stigma and the Undoing of Global Health. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.

      18 Briggs, C. and Mantini-Briggs, C. (2003). Stories in the Time of Cholera: Racial Profiling during a Medical Nightmare. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

      19 Briggs, C. and Mantini-Briggs, C. (2016). Tell Me Why My Children Died: Rabies, Indigenous Knowledge and Communicative Justice. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

      20 Briggs, C. and Nichter, M. (2009). Biocommunicability and the biopolitics of pandemic threats. Medical Anthropology 28 (3): 189–198.

      21 Brown, H. and Nading, A. (2019). Introduction: Human animal health in medical anthropology. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 33 (1): 5–23

      22 Bulled, N., Singer, M., and Dillingham, R. (2014). The syndemics of childhood diarrhea: A biosocial perspective on efforts to combat global inequities in diarrhea-related morbidity and mortality. Global Public Health 9 (7): 841–853.

      23 CDC. (2020). COVID-19 hospitalization and deathy by race/ethnicity, centers for disease control and prevention (November 30). https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/covid-data/investigations-discovery/hospitalization-death-by-race-ethnicity.html.

      24 Clarkin, P. (2019). The embodiment of war: Growth, development and armed conflict. Annual Reviews of Anthropology 48: 423–442.

      25 Conching, A.K.S. and Thayer, Z. (2019). Biological pathways for historical trauma to affect health: A conceptual model focusing on epigenetic modifications. Social Science and Medicine 230: 74–82.

      26 Crooks, D. (1998). Poverty and nutrition in Eastern Kentucky: The political economy of childhood growth. In: Building a New Biocultural Synthesis: Political Economic Perspectives in Biological Anthropology (ed. A. Goodman and T. Leatherman), 339–358. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.

      27 Cutchin, M. (2007). The need for the “new health geography” in epidemiologic studies of environment an health. Health and Place 13: 735–742.

      28 David, R.J. and Collins, J.W., Jr. (23 October 1997). Differing birth weight among infants of U.S.-born blacks, African-born blacks, and U.S.-born whites. New England Journal of Medicine 337 (17): 1209–1214. doi: 10.1056/NEJM199710233371706. PMID: 9337381.

      29 Dewey, K. (1989). Nutrition and the commoditization of food systems in Latin America. Social Science and Medicine 28: 415–424.

      30 Dressler, W. and Bindon, J. (2000). The health consequences of cultural consonance: Cultural dimensions of lifestyle, social support, and arterial blood pressure in an African American Community. American Anthropologist 102 (2): 244–260.

      31 Dressler, W.W., Balieiro, M.C., Ribeiro, R.P., and Dos Santos, J.E. (2014). Culture as a mediator of health disparities: Cultural consonance, social class and health. Annals of Anthropological Practice 38: 216–233.

      32 Dressler, W.W., Oths, K.S., and Gravlee, C.C. (2005). Race and ethnicity in public health research: Models to explain health disparities. Annual Review of Anthropology 34: 231–252.

      33 Ennis-McMillan, M.C. (2001). Suffering from water: Social origins of bodily distress in a Mexican community. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 15 (3): 368–390.

      34 Fafard-St. Germain, A.A., Galloway, T., and Tarasuk, V. (2019). Food insecurity in Nunavut following the introduction of Nutrition North Canada. Canadian Medical Association Journal 191: E552–558.

      35 FAO. (2002). The State of Food Insecurity in the World, 2002. Rome: Food and Agricultural Organization.

      36 Farmer, P. (1999). Infections and Inequalities: The Modern Plagues. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

      37 Farmer, P. (2004). An anthropology of structural violence. Current Anthropology 45 (3): 305–325.

      38 Feachem, R.G.A. (2000). Editorial: Poverty and inequity: A proper focus for the new century. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 78 (1): 1–2.

      39 Foucault, M., Davidson, A.I., and Burchell, G. (2008). The Birth of Biopolitics: Lectures at the Collège De France, 1978–1979. London: Palgrave Macmillan.

      40 Fox-Keller, E. (2014). From gene action to reactive genome. Journal of Physiology 592: 2423–2429.

      41 Franklin, S. and McKinnon, S. (eds.) (2001). Relative Values: Reconfiguring Kinship Studies. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

      42 Fuentes, A. (2016). The extended evolutionary synthesis, ethnography, and the human niche: Toward an integrated anthropology. Current Anthropology 57 (S13): S13–S26.

      43 Fuentes, A. (2019). Holobionts, multispecies ecologies and the biopolitics of care: Emerging landscapes of praxis in a medical anthropology of the anthropocene. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 33 (1): 156–162.

      44 Galloway, T., Horlick, S., Cherba, M., Cole, M., Woodgate, R., and Healey Akearok, G. (2020). Perspectives of Nunavut patients and families on their cancer and end of life care experiences. International Journal of Circumpolar Health 79 (1766319): 12.

      45 Gardner, G. and Halweil, B. (2000). Overfed and Underfed: The Global Epidemic of Malnutrition. Worldwatch Paper 150. Washington, DC: Worldwatch Institute.

      46 Garrett, L. (1994). The Coming Plague: Newly Emerging Diseases in a World Out of Balance. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux.

      47 Geronimus, A.T. (1992). The weathering hypothesis and the health of African-American women and infants: Evidence and speculations. Ethnicity & Disease 2: 207–221.

      48 Gilbert, S., Sap, J., and Tauber, A.I. (2013). A symbiotic view of life: We have never been individuals. The Quarterly Review of Biology 87 (4): 325–241.

      49 Gilbert, S.F. (2003). The reactive genome. In: Origination of Organismal Form: Beyond the Gene in Developmental and Evolutionary Biology (ed. G. B. Muller and S. A. Newman), 87–101. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

      50 Ginzburg, S.L. (2020). Sweetened syndemics: Diabetes, obesity, and politics in Puerto Rico. Journal of Public Health. doi: 10.1007/s10389-020-01345-5.

      51 Gone, J.P. (2013). Redressing First Nations historical trauma: Theorizing mechanisms for indigenous culture as mental health treatment. Transcultural Psychiatry 50 (5): 683–706.

      52 Goodman, A. (1997). Bred in the Bone. The Sciences (March/April): 20–25.

      53 Goodman, A. (1998). The biological consequences of inequality in antiquity. In: Building a New Biocultural Synthesis: Political Economic Perspectives in Biological Anthropology (ed. A. Goodman and T. Leatherman), 147–169. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.

      54 Goodman, A. (2000). Why genes don’t count (for racial differences in health). American Journal of Public Health 90 (11): 1699–1702.

      55 Goodman, A. (2006). Seeing culture in biology. In: The Nature of Difference: Science, Society and Human Biology (ed. G. Ellison and A. Goodman), 225–241. London: Taylor and Francis.

      56 Goodman, A. and Leatherman, T. (1998). Traversing the chasm between biology and culture: An introduction.