CHAPTER 2: ANTHROPOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON HEALTH AND DISEASE

Epidemiological Approach

Epidemiology is the study of factors that affect health and disease among populations and is considered a fundamental aspect of public health research. Epidemiology focuses on identifying disease risk factors based on how, when, and where they occur. By collecting this data, epidemiologists provide data for measuring the occurrence of health phenomena. Anthropologists may use this approach to examine cultural patterns such as food, work location, sexual activity, water, and medical practices that may affect or show a correlation with the prevalence of a particular disease. Epidemiology involves the usage of mapping out diseases and showing where in an environment that disease arose. This can be done using geographic information systems to identify where in a population a disease has spread and how far.

In addition, epidemiological studies are divided into two types: Retrospective and Prospective. Retrospective describes whether the events have already occurred and Prospective describes whether the events may occur in the future. Retrospective studies are the most common of epidemiological studies and are also known as case-control studies. Case-control studies take place when there is an outbreak of disease in the population and the cause of the disease is unknown or when the population is not familiar with the disease.

CITATION/ATTRIBUTION

8.1: Theoretical Approaches in Medical Anthropology. (2018, April 28). Social Sci LibreTexts. https://socialsci.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Anthropology/Cultural_Anthropology/Book%3A_Cultural_Anthropology_(Wikibook)/8%3A_Health_and_Healing/8.1%3A_Theoretical_Approaches_in_Medical_Anthropology

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PPSC ANT 2550 Medical Anthropology by Sandi Harvey is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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