My work (and that of a UF colleague, Connie Mulligan) is featured on thisisanthropology.com. Amazing the things you miss when you’re out of the country for two years. Thanks AAA!
Category: Headline
Will place the post in the headline space of the page
The Value of Medical Anthropology
The majority leader of the House of Representatives, Eric Cantor, just personally attacked the worth of my dissertation research in an Op-Ed in the USA Today. My actual project in Bolivia. You can read the letter HERE.
In defense of my work, I’ll just quote verbatim the first paragraph that justifies my research from my job app cover letters: The central question that motivates my research is why chronic stress tracks along the fault lines of social inequity among rapidly globalizing populations. This question is important because stress-related diseases have the highest global disease burden today and this burden is disproportionately borne by the poor and socially marginalized. My pre-dissertation and dissertation fieldwork, funded by two NSF grants, make a unique contribution to medical anthropology and population health research by investigating the role of culture as a stress buffer among a group of Amazonian foraging-farmers who seem to defy the usual connection between globalization, inequality and psychosocial stress—the Tsimane’ of lowland Bolivia. The Tsimane’ present a puzzle because despite two decades of rapid culture change and market integration they have some of the world’s lowest average levels of short-term stress biomarker measures and related adverse health outcomes. My dissertation attempts to solve this puzzle using long-term ethnography and a sociocultural epidemiologic survey to advance our understanding of the links between culture and the stress process.
Stay tuned for updates on the pending NSF response to the opinion piece.
UPDATE (10/2/2013): Not one to let a little momentum go to waste, I am planning to respond in an Op-Ed piece of my own (and it may be co-written). Along with that, I have a crowd-funding launch in the works on Rockethub.com to enable analyses of retrospective stress biomarkers collected during my NSF research project. I hope those who see the value in my research might consider supporting it tangibly as well.
The Stress-Disease Connection with Dr. Gabor Maté
I found this set of three interviews with Dr. Gabor Maté on the Stress-Disease Connection, Addiction, Attention Deficit Disorder and the Destruction of American Childhood really interesting and thought provoking.
Also check out the papers mentioned by Darcia Narvaez from Notre Dame.
New AAA Poster
Thursday, November 18th I presented a poster on the sociocentric network analysis of market alters in a Tsimane’ village based on data I collected summer 2010 among the Tsimane’ in the Bolivian Amazon. Click the image for a larger version.
New Article in Press
A couple of years after completing a Cal-EIS fellowship at the Office of AIDS in California, I was happy to recently learn that some research I was involved with to match HIV/AIDS and TB registry data will soon be published in Health Informatics Journal. See more on my publications page.
Welcome to My New Blog
As a part of my new web presence I hope to use this blog to highlight my ongoing work and other related news items and research. Stay tuned for updates once I’ve gotten the site design nailed down for good.
Thanks!
-Alan