Andrea Wiley investigates the ecological, historical, and socio-cultural factors that contribute to the peculiar pattern of infant mortality in Ladakh, a high-altitude region in the western Himalayas of India. Ladakhi newborns are extremely small at birth, smaller than those in other high-altitude populations, smaller still than those in sea level regions. Factors such as hypoxia, dietary patterns, the burden of women's work, gender, infectious diseases, seasonality, and use of local health resources all affect a newborn's birth weight and raise the likelihood of infant mortality. An Ecology of High-Altitude Infancy is unique in that it makes use of the methods of human biology but strongly emphasizes the ethnographic context that gives human biological measures their meaning. It is an example of a new genre of anthropological work: 'ethnographic human biology'.



Zusammenfassung
This book examines the low birth weight and infant mortality in high-altitude Indian region Ladakh.
Titel
Ecology of High-Altitude Infancy
Untertitel
A Biocultural Perspective
EAN
9780511189722
ISBN
978-0-511-18972-2
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
22.03.2004
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
1.66 MB
Anzahl Seiten
270
Jahr
2004
Untertitel
Englisch