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Paleoepidemiology: Is There a Case to Answer?
Sheila MF Mendonça de Souza; Diana Maul de Carvalho & Andrea Lessa
Abstract
Paleopathology is the study of disease, physiological disruptions
and impairment in the past. After two centuries of mainly descriptive studies,
efforts are being made towards better methodological approaches to the study of
diseases in human populations of ancient times whose remains are recovered by
archaeology. Paleoepidemiology can be defined as an interdisciplinary area that
aims to develop more suitable epidemiological methods, and to apply those in current
use, to the study of disease determinants in human populations in the past. In
spite of the limits of funerary or other archaeological series of human remains,
paleoepidemiology tries to reconstruct past conditions of disease and health in
those populations and its relation to lifestyle and environment. Although considering
the limits of studying populations of deceased, most of them represented exclusively
by bones and teeth, the frequency of lesions and other biological signs of interest
to investigations on health, and their relative distribution in the skeletal remains
by age and sex, can be calculated, and interpreted according to the ecological
and cultural information available in each case. Building better models for bone
pathology and bone epidemiology, besides a more complex theoretical frame for
paleoepidemiological studies is a big job for the future that will need the incorporation
of methods and technology from many areas, including the tools of molecular biology.
Keywords
paleopathology - methods - paleoepidemiology - archaeology - bioarchaeology
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