keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38557345/psychobiographical-reflections-on-viktor-von-weizs%C3%A3-cker-within-the-cultural-framework-of-salutogenesis-and-medical-anthropology
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ottomar Bahrs, Claude-Hélène Mayer
This article explores the life of Viktor von Weizsäcker (VvW, 1886-1957), a German medical doctor, philosopher and founder of the Heidelberg School of Anthropological Medicine, from a psychobiographical and salutogenic perspective. The authors use salutogenesis and sense of coherence (SOC), and take crucial cultural, historical, and socio-structural frameworks into account to explore the life during the 19th and 20th Centuries in Germany. They present the exploration of a strong SOC in the life of VvW and show how SOC is created within the tight family bonds of the family clan, which has produced many extraordinary theologists, philosophers, scientists and politicians over six generations...
2024: International Review of Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38555790/beyond-the-brink-unraveling-the-opioid-crisis-and-its-profound-impacts
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xianhua Zai
This paper examines the long-standing and severe public health crisis, the opioid epidemic in the United States, which has been worsening since the mid-1990s. In contrast to previous research, it investigates the broader impacts of this epidemic, particularly on family members and healthcare systems. Using a comprehensive dataset spanning from 1998 to 2010, the study analyzes opioid use at the three-digit ZIP code level, utilizing data from the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) and individual-level data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) in a two-way fixed effect model...
March 28, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38555789/the-causal-impact-of-fetal-exposure-to-pm2-5-on-birth-outcomes-evidence-from-rural-china
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lyuxiu Li, Xin Zhang
This paper investigates the causal impact of fetal exposure to PM2.5 on birth outcomes, including birth weight, the incidence of low birth weight (LBW), and small for gestational age (SGA), based on a nationally representative birth record dataset in a developing country setting. We employed thermal inversion as the instrument variable (IV) for PM2.5 and leveraged the distinctive characteristics of rural China in the 1990 s to address identification challenges. Our IV estimates indicate that higher fetal PM2...
March 24, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38547556/a-comment-on-height-and-the-standard-of-living-in-puerto-rico-from-the-spanish-enlightenment-to-annexation-by-the-united-states-1770-1924
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brian Marein, John Devereux
Using prisoner height data, Moreno-Lázaro (2023) claims that Puerto Rican living standards declined after US annexation and stagnated for decades. This conclusion is not supported by the prisoner data and is inconsistent with other welfare measures that show dramatic improvement, such as per capita GDP, life expectancy, and literacy.
March 19, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38546449/challenging-nhs-corporate-mentality-hospital-management-and-bureaucracy-in-london-s-pandemic
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rebecca Irons
Whilst NHS Health Service management is usually characterized by hierarchized bureaucracy and profit-driven competitiveness, the COVID-19 pandemic drastically disrupted these ways of working and allowed London-based non-clinical management to experience their roles otherwise. This paper is based on 35 interviews with senior non-clinical management at a London-based NHS Trust during 'Alpha phase' of Britain's pandemic response (May-August 2020), an oft-overlooked group in the literature. I will draw upon Graeber's theory of "total bureaucratization" to argue that though the increasing neo-liberalization of the health-services has hitherto contributed toward a corporate mentality, the pandemic gave managers a chance to experience more collaboration and freedom than usual, which ultimately led to more effective realization of decision-making and change...
April 2, 2024: Medical Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38537610/secular-change-in-heights-of-rural-adults-in-west-central-poland-between-1986-and-2016-the-transition-from-pre-to-post-communism
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sylwia Bartowiak, Jan M Konarski, Ryszard Strzelczyk, Robert M Malina
Secular change in the heights of adult men and women resident in ten rural communities in west-central Poland in four decennial surveys between 1986 and 2016 is considered. The adults were parents of children attending schools in rural communities in the province of Poznań. During each survey, parents of school children were asked to complete a questionnaire which requested their ages, heights and completed levels of education. Ages were reported in whole years. The self-reported heights were adjusted for the tendency of individuals to overestimate height...
March 22, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38531263/unconditional-cash-transfers-health-and-savings
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sefa Awaworyi Churchill, Nasir Iqbal, Saima Nawaz, Siew Ling Yew
This paper examines the relationship between a national unconditional cash transfers (UCTs) program, health and savings. We theoretically and empirically show that motives to save can be strong when cash transfers promote health outcomes. We first present a theoretical model that considers lifecycle-consumption savings decisions, where households derive utility from consumption and leisure time at working age, as well as old-age consumption and old-age longevity that positively depend on health spending. We then empirically examine the impact of Pakistan's Benazir Income Support Programme on various indicators of savings and provide suggestive evidence on how UCTs influence savings via health...
March 15, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38518565/fracture-variation-in-survivable-versus-fatal-blunt-force-trauma-associated-with-intimate-partner-violence
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicole M Saenz, Sean D Tallman
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a global human rights issue that affects approximately 25% of women and 10% of men and is the leading cause of homicides of women worldwide. Multiple interventional studies have been conducted to screen for IPV; however, fractures associated with intimate partner homicide (IPH) have not been studied from a forensic anthropological perspective. Therefore, this study uses computed tomography scans of IPH victims (n=33) obtained from the New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigator to 1) classify and quantify perimortem craniofacial blunt force fractures, and 2) compare the IPH-related fractures to those associated with non-lethal IPV using previously published studies...
March 18, 2024: Forensic Science International
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38518546/-deaths-of-despair-over-the-business-cycle-new-estimates-from-a-shift-share-instrumental-variables-approach
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christopher Lowenstein
This study presents new evidence of the effects of short-term economic fluctuations on suicide, fatal drug overdose, and alcohol-related mortality among working-age adults in the United States from 2003-2017. Using a shift-share instrumental variables approach, I find that a one percentage point increase in the aggregate employment rate decreases current-year non-drug suicides by 1.7 percent. These protective effects are concentrated among working-age men and likely reflect a combination of individual labor market experiences as well as the indirect effects of local economic growth...
March 13, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38516374/hunter-gatherer-genetics-research-importance-and-avenues
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cecilia Padilla-Iglesias, Inez Derkx
Major developments in the field of genetics in the past few decades have revolutionised notions of what it means to be human. Although currently only a few populations around the world practise a hunting and gathering lifestyle, this mode of subsistence has characterised members of our species since its very origins and allowed us to migrate across the planet. Therefore, the geographical distribution of hunter-gatherer populations, dependence on local ecosystems and connections to past populations and neighbouring groups have provided unique insights into our evolutionary origins...
2024: Evolutionary human sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38507986/education-increases-patience-evidence-from-a-change-in-a-compulsory-schooling-law
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pınar Kunt Šimunović
I investigate the causal effect of education on time preferences. To deal with the endogeneity of education, I exploit exogenous variation in education imposed by a Turkish school reform that raised compulsory education from five to eight years. I find that education causes individuals to make more patient inter-temporal choices but does not induce them to report being more patient. I also provide evidence that the effect of education on patient inter-temporal choices does not operate through changes in financial well-being...
March 15, 2024: Economics and Human Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38468161/structural-competency-in-global-perspective
#32
EDITORIAL
Carlos Piñones-Rivera, Seth Holmes, Michelle Morse, Joel Ferrall, Kavya Nambiar, Ángel Martínez-Hernáez
This special issue aims to help fill two critical gaps in the growing literature as well as in practice. First, to bring together scholars and practitioners from around the world who develop, practice, review, and question structural competency with the aim of promoting a dialogue with related approaches, such as Latin American Social Medicine, Collective Health, and others, which have been key in diverse geographical and social settings. Second, to contribute to expanding structural competency beyond clinical medicine to include other health-related areas such as social work, global health, public health practice, epidemiological research, health policy, community organisation and beyond...
January 2024: Global Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38467446/clarifying-human-dignity-in-forensic-practice
#33
REVIEW
Ezra E H Griffith, Véronique A S Griffith
The notion of human dignity remains a relatively complex concept that has roots in classical Greek and Roman antiquity and links to religious teachings and Kantian philosophical notions. From the Latin dignitas , human dignity means worth and implies excellence and distinction. Human dignity, also found in 20th century constitutions and international declarations, has been considered in bioethics, general medicine, and psychiatry. The application of dignity to forensic psychiatry practice has received less attention...
March 11, 2024: Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38465854/vascular-microforamina-and-endocranial-surface-normal-variation-and-distribution-in-adult-humans-vascular-biology
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emiliano Bruner, Stanislava Eisová
The term craniovascular traits refers to the imprints left by arteries and veins on the skull bones. These features can be used in biological anthropology and archaeology to investigate the morphology of the vascular network in extinct species and past populations. Generally, the term refers to macrovascular features of the endocranial cavity, like those associated with the middle meningeal artery, venous sinuses, emissary foramina, and diploic channels. However, small vascular passages (here called microforamina or microchannels) have been occasionally described on the endocranial surface...
March 11, 2024: Anatomical Record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38451490/crafting-ethnographic-relationships-during-the-covid-19-pandemic-in-germany-using-voice-based-technologies
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sibille Merz, Franziska König, Joshua Paul, Andreas Bergholz, Christine Holmberg
Drawing on a two-year ethnography of care practices during the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany, we discuss the affordances of voice-based technologies (smartphones, basic mobile phones, and landline telephones) in collecting ethnographic data and crafting relationships with participants. We illustrate how such technologies allowed us to move with participants, eased data collection through the social expectations around their use, and reoriented our attention to the multiple qualities of sound. Adapting research on the performativity of technology, we argue that voice-based technologies integrated us into participants' everyday lives while also maintaining physical distance in times of infectious sociality...
March 7, 2024: Medical Anthropology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38451485/testing-care-and-morality-everyday-testing-during-covid-19-in-denmark
#36
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
#37
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
#38
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
#39
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
#40
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
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