An October poll of 1,000 likely voters found that Americans are increasingly concerned about income inequality. When asked: “How Big a Problem is Income Inequality in the US?,” the majority (74%) replied that it was either a big problem or somewhat of a problem. Predictably, there were differences in opinion by political ideology, but a [...]
Archive for the ‘Fetal origins’ Category
Inequality, Health Disparities, & Obesity
Posted in anthropology, DOHaD, Fetal origins, Health Disparities, Human biology, Life expectancy, Life History Theory, Nutrition, Obesity, Population Health, Poverty, Stress on November 5, 2011 | 5 Comments »
A Human Biology of War: The Proximate and the Ultimate
Posted in anthropology, Biology, Evolution, Fetal origins, Global Health, Health Disparities, Human growth, Population Health, Refugees, Stress, War and health on July 24, 2010 | 4 Comments »
… On the surface, it may not be so clear where war, health, and evolution intersect. From the perspective of biological anthropology, many have called for a holistic, transdisciplinary approach to human biology and health which considers the environment as the totality of its evolutionary, ecological, and social components, including social inequality (Little and Haas [...]
Conference April 23-25
Posted in Cooperation and conflict, Fetal origins, Global Health, Human growth, Nutrition, War and health on April 19, 2010 | Leave a Comment »
I’ll be in Seattle April 22-25 at a conference on War and Global Health at the University of Washington. My session is Saturday, April 24 at 11AM (War and Children). I’m really looking forward to it.
Inequality, Evolution & Obesity
Posted in Biocultural, Evolution, Fetal origins, Global Health, Human growth, Nutrition, Obesity, Poverty, Socioeconomic status, tagged Evolution, Obesity on March 24, 2010 | Leave a Comment »
A recent study on child obesity by researchers at Harvard has received a good deal of media attention lately. In the NY Times, a synopsis of the study was one of the most emailed articles in the country (“Baby Fat May Not Be So Cute After All,” March 22). The key sentence from that article: [...]
Shrinking babies
Posted in Biocultural, Fetal origins, Health Disparities, Human growth, Population Health on January 24, 2010 | Leave a Comment »
Harvard researchers are reporting in the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology that the average birth weight in the U.S. has actually dropped over the past 15 years. The study looked at more than 36 million full-term births between 1990 and 2005. After controlling for confounding variables, it was found that birth weight had decreased by 52 [...]
