Medical Anthropology Intro
Global Health Intro
Frameworks for Health Equity
Ecosyndemics & Integral Ecology
Miscellaneous
100

What are the four sub-disciplines of US anthropology?

Archaeology, biological anthropology, cultural anthropology, and linguistic anthropology 

100

What is the difference between public health and global health?

Public health focuses on the health of populations, while global health is an area of study and practice that aims at achieving health equity for all people worldwide 

100

What case study did we use to understand the concept of 'structural vulnerability'?

Disproportionately high rates of gun violence in Puerto Rican neighborhoods of Philadelphia - infrastructural environment conducive to narcotics trade - racial divisions and opioid epidemic contributed to narcotics trade - contributed to culture of violence 
100

What is special about the Amazon rainforest?

The most biodiverse ecosystem on Earth and world's largest rainforest, home to 1 million Indigenous community members (about 400 groups, each with its own language, culture, and territory)

100

What is the "great epidemiological divide"?

A concept that describes the gap in health and longevity between two groups of people in the world - one that generally fares well and dies of diseases associated with old age, and one that dies much earlier from diseases that are curable

200
This approach views biology and culture as dialectically and inextricably intertwined, explicitly emphasizing the dynamic interaction between humans and their larger social, cultural, and physical environments.

Biocultural Approach

200

What is PIH (Partners in Health)?

A global health organization that works in partnership with the WHO to deliver quality healthcare to marginalized communities around the world

200

Explain the concept of 'embodiment'

'Embodiment' says that we incorporate, biologically, the material and social world in which we live 
200

What were some of the pros and cons of the Interoceanic highway in Peru/Bolivia/Brazil?

Pros: Increased economic opportunities, easier access to regional healthcare facilities, more diverse food options

Cons: More processed foods, conflicts over land, substance abuse, increases in infectious diseases 

200

Who coined the term 'structural violence'? 

Norwegian sociologist Johan Galtung 

300

What is participant-observation?

Researchers participate in people's lives, observing and taking field notes. Along with interviews and surveys, this constitutes anthropological data

300

What is an explanatory model of illness?

A patient's belief about their illness - including personal and social meaning, expectations, and therapeutic goals - a culturally shaped process that can affect treatment and relationships with healthcare providers

300

Describe the difference between positivism and interpretivism

Positivism: Everything can be studied objectively using the methods of the natural sciences to identify general laws, regularities, or causal relationships

Interpretivism: Anything to do with humans should be interpreted through local meaning, context, and lived experience

300

What is revolutionary about Pope Francis & Laudato Si?

Francis challenges traditionally anthropocentric categories used in CST and he considers Earth a category of the poor and vulnerable 

300

What are 'anthropogenic environments'?

Environments that have been modified by human activity, either directly or indirectly 

400

Define holism and dynamism

Holism: Interconnections (like between biology and culture)

Dynamism: Change over time

400

What are lentiviruses?

Viruses that tend to cause disease slowly (such as HIV)

400

What is Margaret Lock's concept of 'local biologies'? 

An ongoing dialectic between biology and culture in which both are contingent - biology is more socially contingent than we often think it is

400

What is 'ecological conversion'?

A transformation in how humans relate to Earth and creation

400

What is MDR-TB/how is it different from TB?

A type of tuberculosis caused by bacteria that are resistant to at least two of the most effective TB drugs (isoniazid and rifampin) 

500

Give an example of marginalization

Lack of healthcare and social services on Native American reservations

500

What kind of drug is HAART? 

A protease inhibitor (It prevents HIV from making copies of itself and limits how much virus is in the body)

500

What are the five domains of water insecurity? 

Access, Affordability, Adequacy, Safety, Reliability 

500

What is the 'technocratic paradigm' that Pope Francis speaks of in Laudato Si

The idea that technology/technological development is going to bring positive outcomes or that every increase in power is an increase in progress 
500

Explain Nancy Krieger's 'Ecosocial Theory'

A multitiered explanatory model to understand the repeating of biological and cultural intertwining at all levels from cells to society - health is more intensively shaped by or ecological and social worlds than we might think it is 

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