Article
Human Rights, Biomedical, Science, and Infectious Diseases among South American Indigenous Groups
Annual Review of Anthropology
(2005)
Abstract
Despite the efforts of international health agencies to reduce global health inequalities, indigenous populations around the world remain largely unaffected by such initiatives. This chapter reviews the biomedical literature indexed by the PubMed database published between 1963 and 2003 on South American indigenous populations, a total of 1864 studies that include 63,563 study participants. Some language family groupings are better represented than are others, and lowland groups are better represented than are highland groups. Very few studies focus on major health threats (e.g., tuberculosis, influenza), public health interventions, or mestizo-indigenous epidemiological comparisons. The prevalence rates of three frequently studied infections—parasitism, human T-cell lymphotropic viral infection (HTLV), and hepatitis—are extraordinarily high, but these facts have been overlooked by national and international health agencies. This review underscores the urgent need for interventions based on known disease prevalence rates to reduce the burden of infectious diseases in indigenous communities.
Keywords
- South America,
- indigenous peoples,
- global health initiatives,
- prevalence rates,
- hepatitis,
- HTLV,
- parasites
Disciplines
Publication Date
October 1, 2005
DOI
10.1146/annurev.anthro.32.061002.093406
Citation Information
A. Magdalena Hurtado, Carol A. Lambourne, Paul James, Kim Hill, et al.. "Human Rights, Biomedical, Science, and Infectious Diseases among South American Indigenous Groups" Annual Review of Anthropology Vol. 34 Iss. 1 (2005) p. 639 - 665 Available at: http://works.bepress.com/paul-james/29/