TY - JOUR KW - Adult KW - Australia KW - Bias KW - Child KW - Child Welfare KW - Disease Outbreaks KW - Ethnic Groups KW - Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice KW - Health Status KW - History, 20th Century KW - Humans KW - leprosy KW - Oceanic Ancestry Group KW - Prejudice KW - Public Health Practice KW - Risk Factors KW - Social Medicine KW - Socioeconomic Factors AU - Brough M AB -
It is difficult to imagine Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health without the powerful descriptors of epidemiology. The statistical imagery of numerical tables, pie charts, and bar graphs have become a key element in the public presentation of Indigenous public health issues. Such quantitative measurements of health draw on the authority of neutral, objective science and are thus rarely questioned in terms of their social meaning. This paper traces the history of this imagery through the 20th century, providing a social account of epidemiological description. Historical notions such as social Darwinism, assimilation, and dangerous other are all seen to be woven into the epidemiological text. The enormous rise in the epidemiological description of Indigenous health problems in recent years needs to be analyzed as a social phenomenon and, in particular, as an aspect of emerging forms of governmentality. Finally, it is argued that such analyses are needed in order to promote an anthropology of epidemiology and to avoid limiting medical anthropology to applications within epidemiology.
BT - Medical anthropology C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11820767?dopt=Abstract DA - 2001 DO - 10.1080/01459740.2001.9966187 IS - 1 J2 - Med Anthropol LA - eng N2 -It is difficult to imagine Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health without the powerful descriptors of epidemiology. The statistical imagery of numerical tables, pie charts, and bar graphs have become a key element in the public presentation of Indigenous public health issues. Such quantitative measurements of health draw on the authority of neutral, objective science and are thus rarely questioned in terms of their social meaning. This paper traces the history of this imagery through the 20th century, providing a social account of epidemiological description. Historical notions such as social Darwinism, assimilation, and dangerous other are all seen to be woven into the epidemiological text. The enormous rise in the epidemiological description of Indigenous health problems in recent years needs to be analyzed as a social phenomenon and, in particular, as an aspect of emerging forms of governmentality. Finally, it is argued that such analyses are needed in order to promote an anthropology of epidemiology and to avoid limiting medical anthropology to applications within epidemiology.
PY - 2001 SP - 65 EP - 90 T2 - Medical anthropology TI - Healthy imaginations: a social history of the epidemiology of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health. VL - 20 SN - 0145-9740 ER -