short disscussion
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CHAPTER 16
HOW IS ANTHROPOLOGY
APPLIED IN THE FIELD OF
MEDICINE?
Examine how medical anthropology
▪Is an applied approach relying on participant
observation
▪Shows that a cultural perspective uncovers
matters of illness and health often ignored by
traditional medicine
Discuss how different cultures understand
the causes of sickness and health
Learn how sickness and health are shaped
by the global economy
CHAPTER OBJECTIVES
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Medical anthropologists focus on human health and ways that humans perceive and react to disease and illness.
Health is a sense of physical, emotional, and mental well-being shaped by cultural, social, and political experiences and expectations.
Suf fering recognizes that physical, mental, or emotional distress associated with a disease extends beyond a traditional Western biomedical focused only on biological functioning.
WHAT IS MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY?
F I G U R E 1 6 . 1
M a n y p e o p l e
a r o u n d t h e w o r l d
s e e k h e l p f r o m
b i o m e d i c a l
p r a c t i t i o n e r s
w h e n t h e y f e e l
t h a t t h ey a r e n o t
h e a l t hy. A
K e n y a n
p e d i a t r i c i a n
e x a m i n e s a
y o u n g p a t i e n t .
[ASHRAF
SHAZLY/AFP/Getty
Images]
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Sickness can correspond to Western concepts of disease that are based in physical causes.
Medical anthropologists see sickness as how members of a cultural community recognize and classify physical, mental, and emotional distress.
Culture-bound syndromes are unique to a particular cultural group.
Illness is the suffering person’s own understanding of his or her distress.
WHAT IS SICKNESS AND ILLNESS?
Anthropologists emphasize that cultural practices mediate human biological adaptations to physical environments.
▪Biological evolution focuses on changes in gene frequencies over time.
▪Cultural evolution focuses on changes in cultural information obtained and spread through social learning.
Some medical anthropologists focus on the biological and cultural contexts of human sickness and health.
WHAT MAKES MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
“BIOCULTURAL”?
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Patterns of sickness and health are examined through
▪Demography: the statistical study of populations
▪Epidemiology: the study of the distribution of disease and explanations for the distributions
Paleodemography uses archaeological and biological anthropological data to study demographic patterns of past human populations
HOW DO MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGIST S
EXAMINE PATTERNS IN SICKNESS AND
HEALTH?
Epidemic diseases spread quickly through a
population over a short time period.
Endemic diseases are always present in a
population.
Syndemic approaches examine how
diseases in a population are affected by
stressful environmental factors such as
▪Poor nutrition
▪Social instability
▪Violence
DEMOGRAPHY AND MEDICAL
ANTHROPOLOGY
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Public health interventions directed at one component of a syndemic condition are always inadequate
SAVA is a common syndemic condition consisting of
▪Substance abuse
▪Violence
▪AIDS
A multipronged approach by medical anthropologists and other public health individuals is needed to address syndemic conditions
SYNDEMIC CONDITIONS
Adaptation refers to adjustments made
by organisms to environmental
challenges.
▪Biological adaptation focuses on
modifications of anatomical or physiological
attributes through natural selection.
▪Biocultural adaptation considers how human
cultural practices influence selection on
genes.
SICKNESS AND HEALTH IN
EVOLUTIONARY CONTEXT
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Sickle-cell anemia results from a genetic mutation that alters red blood cells into a sickle shape, reducing their ability to carry oxygen through the bloodstream
Most individuals with sickle -cell anemia do not survive adulthood
Sickle-cell anemia was selected for when populations shifted from being hunters and gatherers to farmers, opening areas to malarial mosquitoes
BIOCULTURAL ADAPTATIONS AND
MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
Lactose intolerance is the inability to
digest fresh milk in adulthood.
Most populations outside of Europe and
parts of Africa are lactose intolerant.
Human populations with a history of
keeping dairy herds are more lactose
tolerant.
BIOCULTURAL ADAPTATIONS AND
MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
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People from different cultures have their
own explanations for
▪Why people get sick
▪How (or whether) sicknesses may be cured
Cultural explanations for sickness
include
▪Biomedical causes
▪Witchcraft or sorcery
▪Punishment by ancestors for breaking taboos
HOW DO DIFFERENT CULTURES
UNDERSTAND CAUSES OF SICKNESS AND
HEALTH?
Biomedical accounts accept only
material causes for ill health.
Biomedical understandings define ill -
health as disease caused by material
entities located inside human bodies.
Medical anthropologists recognize that ill
health may be caused by cultural factors
located outside the body.
HOW DO DIFFERENT CULTURES
UNDERSTAND CAUSES OF SICKNESS AND
HEALTH?
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Some individuals have senses of self
that are not self-contained or closed off
Material entities like microbes and
nonmaterial entities like spirits can
enter individuals
Charismatic Christians
▪Are open to God’s Holy Spirit
▪Are vulnerable to evil spirits or demons
▪Can heal themselves through prayer
KINDS OF SELVES
F I G U R E 1 6 . 2
C h a r i s m a t i c
C h r i s t i a n s
c o n s i d e r
t h e m s e l v e s
v u l n e r a b l e t o
p e n e t r a t i o n b y
n o n m a t e r i a l
e n t i t i e s l i k e
s p i r i t s .
[Photo by Lannis
Waters/Palm Beach
Post/ZUMA Press. ©
Copyright 2006 by Palm
Beach Post.]
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Cross-cultural concepts of spirit
possession resemble mental and
emotional disturbances studied by
Western psychologists and psychiatrists.
▪Medical anthropologies recognize that many
forms of suffering cannot be reduced to
simple material causes.
▪Prayer is a skilled practice that trains people
to ignore outside factors and focus on their
inner selves.
KINDS OF SELVES
Unified and integrated selves are bounded and centered
Decentered selves are open to the wider world, sometimes through spiritual discipline
Decentered selves include those involved in virtual reality and gaming ▪Avatars in Second Life are decentered selves
found on the Internet
▪Dividual selves have a divided sense of self which can manifest as multiple avatars
KINDS OF SELVES
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F I G U R E 1 6 . 3
A v a t a r s i n
S e c o n d L i f e c a n
b e c u s t o m i z e d t o
r e p r e s e n t t h e
s e l f . H e r e , a
s c r e e n c a p t u r e
f r o m S e c o n d L i f e
s h o w s a n a v a t a r
v i s i t i n g a v i r t u a l
m u s e u m i n
M a r c h 2 0 07.
[REUTERS/Suzanne
Miller]
Individuals may impose meaning on a world that bewilders them, developing an individual subjectivity
Interpretive medical anthropology is based on ▪ the view that culture mediates human experiences
▪ the recognition that cultural systems, including medical systems, are symbolic systems
Beliefs and practices about sickness and health are best understood in their own symbolic cultural contexts
SELF AND SUBJECTIVIT Y
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Explanations that people develop to explain the sources of their suffering are illness narratives
▪One way to explore the symbolic dimensions of human suffering and can be created by sufferers and caregivers
▪Provide information about illness experiences in particular cultural and political contexts
▪Women with cervical cancer in Brazil may incorporate a sexual stigma in their illness narrative
ILLNESS NARRATIVES
FIGURE 16 .4
P o o r w o m e n i n
B r a z i l w h o w e r e
d i a g n o s e d w i t h
c e r v i c a l c a n c e r
d e p e n d e d o n
p u b l i c h e a l t h
i n s u r a n c e o r
c h a r i t y f o r
t r e a t m e n t a n d
s o m e t i m e s
r e c e i v e d m o r e
i n t e n s i v e
t r e a t m e n t t h a n
w a s n e c e s s a r y.
I n t h e c i t y o f
R e c i f e , c e r v i c a l
c a n c e r w a s
n e g a t i v e l y
s t i g m a t i z e d .
[© Noah Addis]
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Individuals are agents of their own actions but are never absolutely free to act
Subject positions occupied by individuals are marked by social, political, and economic inequality
Events alter subject positions, including
▪Colonial conquests
▪Population displacements
▪Armed conflict and war
Traumatic events can have negative health consequences
SUBJECTIVIT Y, TRAUMA , AND
STRUCTURAL VIOLENCE
Korwa people of central India ▪ Former hunters, gatherers, and farmers
▪ Evicted from forest homeland in 1970s and resettled by government in current villages
▪ Today, some are wage laborers in stone quarries and on road construction
Experiential health describes the Korwa perceptions that they are tired, achy, and cannot be healthy
“Full healers” are not always available in the displaced communities to cure these experiential health issues
SUBJECTIVIT Y, TRAUMA , AND
STRUCTURAL VIOLENCE
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F I G U R E 16 . 5
A g r i c u l t u r e h a s
n o t p r o v e n t o b e
s u c c e s s f u l f o r
d i s p l a c e d
Ko r w a , a n d
m a n y f i n d
t h e m s e l v e s
f o r c e d t o w o r k
a s w a g e
l a b o r e r s o r, a s
h e r e , t o p r e p a r e
a n d s e l l
f i r e w o o d .
[Courtesy of Mokshika Gaur]
Structural violence results from the way political and economic forces structure risk for various forms of suffering
▪Infectious and parasitic diseases
▪Hunger
▪Torture
▪Rape
The poorest and least powerful members of society are subjected to highly intensified risk
SUBJECTIVIT Y, TRAUMA , AND
STRUCTURAL VIOLENCE
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F I G U R E 1 6 . 6
D r. P a u l Fa r m e r
w i t h A I D S
p a t i e n t s a t
C l i n i q u e B o n
S a u v e u r .
P o l i t i c a l a n d
e c o n o m i c f o r c e s
s t r u c t u r e
p e o p l e ’ s r i s k s
f o r v a r i o u s f o r m s
o f s u f f e r i n g i n
H a i t i a n d
e l s e w h e r e .
© Gilles Peress/Magnum
Photos
FIGURE 16 .7
T h e i n d i v i d u a l s u b j e c t i v i t i e s o f m a n y H a i t i a n s h a v e b e e n
s h a p e d b y t h e e x p e r i e n c e o f s t r u c t u r a l v i o l e n c e i n t h e f o r m o f
A I D S a n d p o l i t i c a l v i o l e n c e , t w o l e a d i n g c a u s e s o f d e a t h
a m o n g y o u n g p e o p l e i n H a i t i . T h e y l e a v e b e h i n d o t h e r f o r m s
o f s o c i a l s u f f e r i n g f o r t h e i r p a r e n t s a n d c h i l d r e n . H e r e , t h e
p a r e n t s o f J e a n - D av i d D r o i t d i e u , a n A I D S v i c t i m , h o l d i n g h i s
o r p h a n e d d a u g h t e r, s i t i n f r o n t o f t h e i r h o m e a n d t h e p l a c e o f
h i s b u r i a l , s u r r o u n d e d b y r e l a t i v e s a n d n e i g h b o r s . [© Mikce Stocke/Sun-
Sentinel/ZUMAPRESS.com]
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Medical anthropologists examine structural violence and syndemics to contextualize sickness and health across the world
Individual and local experiences and interpretations of suffering fit into broader historical and political contexts
Historical contexts include ▪ European colonial domination
▪ Institution of racial slavery
▪ Organization of indigenous groups into a hierarchy favoring colonizer over colonized
▪ Expansion of global capitalism
HOW ARE SICKNESS AND HEALTH
SHAPED BY THE GLOBAL CAPITALIST
ECONOMY?
F I G U R E 1 6 . 8
C o l o n i a l p o w e r s
b r o u g h t
b i o m e d i c i n e
w i t h t h e m a n d
e s t a b l i s h e d
h o s p i t a l s l i k e
t h i s o n e i n
M o z a m b i q u e i n
c o l o n i a l
t e r r i t o r i e s , b u t
a c c e s s t o t h o s e
h o s p i t a l s w a s
n o t e q u a l f o r
e v e r y o n e .
[ERIC LAFFORGUE /
Alamy Stock Photo]
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Cosmopolitan medicines are Western
biomedical systems adopted by non -
Western peoples
Ethnomedical systems are based on
practices of local sociocultural groups
Medical pluralism results in hierarchies of
resort
▪Local practitioners are often sought out initially
▪If not satisfied, other practitioners of
ethnomedical systems are sought out
HOW ARE SICKNESS AND HEALTH
SHAPED BY THE GLOBAL CAPITALIST
ECONOMY?
F I G U R E 1 6 . 9
M e d i c a l
p l u r a l i s m i n
G u i d e r, 1 976 .
Ve n d o r o f
t r a d i t i o n a l
m e d i c i n e s i n t h e
m a r k e t .
[Courtesy Robert H.
Lavenda]
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Medical anthropologists are concerned with factors affecting women’s health related to childbearing
Formal studies of fertility by government agencies or biomedical authorities emphasize controlling population in poorer societies
Medical anthropologists focus on the challenges of infertility in societies with particular gender and family structures
Males are preferred as children in many societies
HEALTH, HUMAN REPRODUCTION, AND
GLOBAL CAPITALISM
F I G U R E 1 6 . 1 0
R e s o u r c e
i n e q u a l i t y
s o m e t i m e s
m e a n s i n e q u a l i t y
i n h e a l t h c a r e .
E x p e c t a n t
m o t h e r s w a i t t o
d e l i v e r t h e i r
b a b i e s a t t h e
Te m e k e h o s p i t a l
i n D a r - e s - S a l a a m ,
Ta n z a n i a .
[ROBERTO
SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images]
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Adherence to antiretroviral (ARV) therapy for HIV/AIDS are lower and infectious rates are higher in poorer communities
ARV therapies can only succeed ▪ If ARV drugs are free
▪ If a solid government-run health care infrastructure exists
▪ If there are more trained health care providers
▪ If programs designed to relieve poverty exist
Medical anthropologists examine the challenges of the poor trying to survive with AIDS
MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY AND HIV/AIDS
F I G U R E 1 6 . 1 1
A s o c i a l w o r k e r
c a r r y i n g a c r a c k
a d d i c t t o r e c e i v e
t r e a t m e n t i n
N o v e m b e r 2 01 2 .
A s i s t h e c a s e f o r
p o o r p e o p l e
l i v i n g w i t h
H I V / A I D S , p o o r
p e o p l e s t r u g g l i n g
t o r e c o v e r f r o m
d r u g a d d i c t i o n
n e e d f o o d a n d
s o c i a l
c o n n e c t i o n s t o
s u r v i v e a f t e r
t r e a t m e n t . I f
t h e s e s u p p o r t s
a r e n o t a v a i l a b l e ,
t h e i r c h a n c e s f o r
r e c o v e r y a r e
s l i m .
© FABIO
TEIXEIRA/dpa/Corbis
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Biomedical breakthroughs mediated by technology are welcomed by medical anthropologists as a form of cosmopolitan medicine
More than pharmaceuticals are required if positive health outcomes are to be achieved
Ethically, medical anthropologists must emphasize the problems of structural violence creating worse health and early death for some people
THE FUTURE OF MEDICAL
ANTHROPOLOGY
F I G U R E 1 6 . 1 2
I n 2 01 2 , A I D S
a c t i v i s t s i n
B r a z i l
d e m o n s t r a t e
a g a i n s t
g o v e r n m e n t
m e a s u r e s
a g a i n s t
H I V / A I D S
p r e v e n t i o n .
© ANDRE
LESSA/dpa/Corbis