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8.6: Chapter Glossary and References

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    5335
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    Chapter Glossary of Key Terms

    Medical syncretism - Fusing of more than one medical practice, such as fusing spiritual and biomedical practices.

    Personalistic Systems - Where an illness is considered unique to the patient and medical practitioners often call upon supernatural forces to facilitate the diagnosis and treatment of disorders because the illness is caused by supernatural forces as well

    Ecological Footprint -The ecological footprint is a quantitative tool that is used to measure human demand on nature, an example would be how much people consume and how much waste they produce.

    Biomarkers - A measurable substance in an organism whose presence is indicative of some phenomenon such as disease, infection, or environmental exposure.

    Peyote - A healing substance that is native to Mexico and southern US, it is a hallucinogen, containing mescaline.

    Aphrodisiac - A food or substance that is believed to increase sexual energy or prowess

    Essential oils - A collection of natural oils that can be used in many different ways to help soothe or fix different types of sicknesses and pain.

    Humor - In the medical field, a humor is a type of fluid substance. It was once believed that one's health was connected to the balance of four particular humors in the body: phlegm, blood, black bile, and yellow bile.

    Medical Pluralism - Integration of biomedicine and other forms of healthcare.

    The Cure-All Herb - A common drinking herb know as kinkeliba, which is used by the west African population to help with colds, flues, and many other health ailments.

    Biopiracy - the exploitation of plant and animal species by foreign entities to restrict their general use

    Placebo effect - an effect that is due to the patient’s belief in the treatment

    Biocultural analyses - the relationship between human biology and culture. How evolution influences disease and how people interpret and explain these based upon their culture.

    Medicalization - the process of making a human condition and creating criteria to define it and then treat it as medical conditions to create prevention strategies, treatment, and study.

    The explanatory model of illness - How patients describe and evaluate their illness. Their view on their condition and their abilities to cope and the affiliation with the disease outcome.

    Cultural bound syndrome - A disease that is only recognized within a certain culture that has a combination of psychiatric and somatic symptoms

    References

    1.  http://altmedicine.about.com/cs/herbsvitaminsek/a/Goldenseal.htm
    2. "A Worldwide Fight Against Biopiracy and Patents on Life". Third World Network. Retrieved 2009-03-09.
    3. "Biopiracy and relat" (in en). BBC. 24 June 2000. Retrieved 2017-11-12.
    4. http://www.enotes.com/public-health-encyclopedia/theories-health-illness
    5. Carol R. Ember; Melvin Ember. "Encyclopedia of Medical Anthropology".
    6. http://www.infohub.com/TRAVEL/SIT/sit_pages/4295.html
    7. http://openlearn.open.ac.uk/mod/resource/view.php?id=278223
    8. ref: http://www.answers.com/topic/immunization
    9. ref: href="http://www.wisegeek.com/how-do-immunizations-work.htm#il">Source: How Do Immunizations Work?</a>
    10. http://specialchildren.about.com/od/autismandvaccines/i/vaccines_2.htm
    11. Addiction - (https://www.psychologytoday.com/basics/addiction)
    12. Jump up to:a b Backgrounder, International Food Information Council Foundation. http://www.ific.org/nutrition/obesity/index.cfm
    13. Mal de Ojo. http://altmed.creighton.edu/MexicanFolk/mal_de_ojo.htm
    14. http://www.mnstate.edu/robertsb/306/culture%20bound%20syndromes.PDF
    15. Alexis Gradwohl, Skyline High School, Developmental Sciences Teacher, 2009
    16. "Anorexia Causes". Significant Health. Retrieved 2009-03-10.
    17. http://www.sarahefron.com/stories/arctichysteria.shtml
    18. Loue, Sana, Martha Sajatovic, and Jeffrey L. Longhofer. Diversity Issues in the Diagnosis, Treatment, and Research of Mood Disorders. illustrated. United States: Oxford University Press , 2007.

    Ali, Al-Wabel, Shams, Ahamad, Khan, & Anwar. (2015). Essential oils used in aromatherapy: A systemic review. Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine, 5(8), 601-611.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Running_amok

    http://home.earthlink.net/~youngturck/Chapter13.htm

    http://www.who.int/tdr/publications/tdr-research-publications/globalization-infectious-diseases/pdf/seb_topic3.pdf

    http://www.medanthro.net/definition.html

    http://www.4woman.gov/faq/anorexia-nervosa.cfm

    Fock, Niels (1963). Waiwai. Religion and society of an Amazonian tribe. Nationalmuseets skrifter, Etnografisk Række (Ethnographical series), VIII. Copenhagen: The National Museum of Denmark.

    Altshul, Sara. "Incontinence: Finally, Relief That Works." Prevention December 2005: 33. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. 30 January 2006

    http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/syndrome?qsrc=2888

    <span class="citation wikicite" id="endnote_"Re-defining Health." World Health Organization. 8 Mar. 2009 <www.who.int/bulletin/bulletin_board/83/ustun11051/en/>.">^

    "Diagnostic crossover in anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa: implications for DSM-V.." Am J Psychiatry February 2008 9 Mar 2009 <http://search.medscape.com/medline-search;jsessionid=02EF3791A6C560EFD57A1211CF77FB0D?newSearch=1&queryTextanorexia>.

    1.http://www.annfammed.org/cgi/content/abstract/3/3/255 2.note|Hahn, Robert. Sickness and Healing. Yale University Press, 1996.

    "Female Genital Mutilation: A Call to Action",Troubia N: New York, New York, Women, Ink, 1993. 48 p.

    1. True, William R. 1984. Prospective on Postdoctoral Public Health Training for Medical Anthropology. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 15(4): 95 – 96.
    2. Scheper-Hughes, Nancy, and Margaret Lock. 1986. Speaking “Truth” to Illness: Metaphors, Reification, and a Pedagogy for Patients. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 17(5):147-40.
    3. Rubel, Arthur. 1964. The Epidemiology of Folk Illness. Ethnology 3:268 – 83.
    4. Sargent, Carolyn, and Thomas Johnson. Handbook of Medical Anthropology: Contemporary Theory and Method Revised Edition. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996.

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