Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 2nd May 2025, 02:18:26am EDT

 
 
Session Overview
Session
In-Person Poster Session
Time:
Wednesday, 12/Mar/2025:
8:00am - 10:00am

Session Chair: Melissa Manus
Location: Harborside


8:00 a.m.–9:00 a.m: Authors of in-person, odd-numbered posters must be present for discussion. 9:00 a.m.–10:00 a.m.: Authors of in-person, even-numbered posters must be present for discussion.

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Presentations

Interdisciplinarity in biocultural investigations of structural vulnerability: Emerging research directions, ethical questions, and potential applications

Meredith Marten, Benjamin Burgen

University of West Florida, United States of America

The discipline of anthropology has a long history of investigating the social and structural determinants of health, health inequities, and structural vulnerability, particularly in the field of medical anthropology (Quesada et al. 2011; Bourgois et al. 2017). More recently, increased emphasis on the forms and mechanisms of structural vulnerability experienced among marginalized populations has emerged among biological anthropologists, especially in more collaborative projects that integrate ethnographic approaches with analyses of the ways lived experiences of violence may be embodied in the hard tissues of the skeleton and dentition (Winburn et al. 2022).

In this paper, we describe recent efforts to strengthen interdisciplinarity in biocultural investigations of structural vulnerability, and advocate for increased engagement across anthropology subdisciplines to leverage the unique contributions of all to better understand and identify the structural causes of excess morbidity and mortality among individuals. We highlight research from scholars across subdisciplines, interrogating emergent biocultural linkages among forensic anthropology, bioarchaeology, human biology, and cultural and medical anthropology. From these scholarly contributions, we consider some emerging research directions, ethical questions, and potential applications, including structural vulnerability assessment tools (Bourgois et al. 2017) and developing training modules to build structural competency among health care professionals (Neff et al. 2020). Finally, we discuss the beginning phases of a multi-country comparative project of the social and structural determinants of antemortem tooth loss and other serious dental pathologies in Senegal, Honduras, and the United States, to illuminate the potential of inter-subdisciplinary collaborations in structural vulnerability and population health.



Utilizing the concept of structural vulnerability in human biology research

Paula Tallman1, Royana Yousefzai2

1Department of Anthropology, Loyola University Chicago, United States of America; 2Parkinson School of Public Health, Loyola University Chicago, United States of America

The concept of structural vulnerability explores how social, economic and political hierarchies produce and pattern poor health. This concept is increasingly being used by biological anthropologists, particularly forensic anthropologists, to investigate the skeletal manifestations of violence and inequitable social systems in the past. Yet, human biologists have yet to utilize this concept in theoretical or applied manners. In this session, we propose that the concept of structural vulnerability can also be usefully applied in the sub-discipline of human biology in order to link larger political-economic, social, and environmental stressors to variation in human life experiences and biological functioning. To make this argument, we discuss prior work on the use of structural vulnerability in fields adjacent to human biology, including bioarchaeology, forensic and medical anthropology. In this paper, we make specific recommendations for how human biologists might productively engage with this concept in their investigations - including using the structural vulnerability as a theoretical framework and as a methodological guide to link larger political-economic structures to biological functioning.



Survivor-advocacy and cycles of care: An anthropological examination of structural sexism and gender-based violence on human health and perceived well-being

Taylor Savannah-Anne Perritt

Department of Anthropology, University of West Florida, Pensacola, FL

The everyday violence of structural sexism is visible in the differential prevalence and severity of some health outcomes linked to structurally gendered contexts. Conceptually rooted in structural racism, structural sexism denotes “the inequitable gendered distribution of power, status, resources, rights, roles, exposures, and opportunities” that comprise societally ingrained gender structures (Homan 2021). Vehicular testing, clinical research, and increasingly restrictive and harmful reproductive healthcare in the U.S. illustrate a fraction of the kinds of gendered policies and institutions that can negatively affect women’s health.

While structural vulnerability has increasingly been applied across anthropological subdisciplines, structural sexism has been primarily concentrated in sociology. In this paper, I demonstrate how anthropologists might further engage with structural sexism, using research of intimate partner violence (IPV) as a case example. By analyzing localized, ethnographic research at a domestic violence shelter in Northwest Florida, I aim to capture the myriad granular aspects of structural sexism and gender-based violence that affect individuals within their local realities. I use research on IPV as a conceptual tool to understand how structural sexism is experienced by women seeking services, including the embodied consequences of experiences of inequitable wealth and gendered stigmatization. I also engage concepts of care and resilience to critically examine systems of localized knowledge and care, describing how employees and volunteers use their own survivor positionalities to effectively practice informed care as survivor-advocates. I support the use of emerging interdisciplinary approaches to structural vulnerability in human biological research, enriching discourse surrounding structural determinants of human health and biology.



Leveraging forensic anthropological data to inform social change: The link between antemortem tooth loss and poverty is a structural problem to solve

Allysha Powanda Winburn

University of West Florida, United States of America

Structural vulnerability builds on structural violence—the theory that inequitable social systems enact violence against human bodies—to describe how individuals with particular positionalities are at greater risk for negative health outcomes. In forensic anthropology, structural vulnerability approaches enable a shift from the discipline’s traditional focus on individual identifications to allow the recognition of population-level patterns in casework. Acknowledging poor skeletal/dental health to be caused by upstream, societal-level influences, not the behavioral factors often perceived as individual choices, enables the reporting of socially produced patterns of suffering to the State.

This research investigated one such pattern—the correlation between poverty and antemortem tooth loss (AMTL)—using a sample of 345 identified, anonymized forensic case decedents of kin-documented age, gender, race, and socioeconomic status (SES) with CT imagery curated in the New Mexico Decedent Image Database (Black female/male n=57; Hispanic female/male n=100; Indigenous female/male n=88; white female/male n=100). CT images were analyzed for AMTL; Wilcoxon signed-rank tests assessed distributional differences between low- and high-SES groups within each gender and race category.

Median AMTL was almost always higher in low-SES individuals than age-matched high-SES individuals—statistically significantly so for Black males (p=0.0006), white females (p<0.0001), and white males (p=0.04). This pattern was reproduced for edentulism (complete AMTL), with low-SES groups exhibiting between 8-25% edentulism, versus 0-8% in high-SES groups.

The poor dental health evidenced among people living in poverty can be rectified with changes to social policy and medical infrastructure. Structural vulnerability highlights problems that are socially created, and thus also solvable.



Food Insecurity and Physiological Stress Amongst People Experiencing Housing Insecurity

IK Albiani1, TL Walker2, AL Van Steenis3, EA Shirtcliff3, LZ DuBois2, JJ Snodgrass2, LJ Weaver1

1Department of Global Studies, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR; 2Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR; 3Center for Translational Neuroscience, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR

One of the many challenges associated with housing insecurity is access to a sufficient quantity of affordable, nutritious food. People experiencing houselessness (PEH) report that food insecurity is a source of significant strain on mental and physical wellbeing, yet very little research has empirically investigated how food insecurity and its associated stressors are associated with health among PEH. Food insecurity is known to negatively impact physical health outcomes and has been associated with higher measures of allostatic load. The present study explores relationships between allostatic load and food insecurity among PEH in a mid-sized city with a high per-capita level of houselessness. Food insecurity was assessed using the USDA’s adult food insecurity module, while allostatic load was assessed with blood pressure, lipids (total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, and triglycerides), HbA1c, and hemoglobin from point-of-care devices, C-reactive protein measured from dried blood spot samples, and cortisol measured from hair samples. Preliminary analysis of participant data (n=147) showed that 73% of participants cut the size of meals or skipped meals, and 61.2% of participants did not eat for a whole day because there wasn’t enough money for food. Biomarker data from this sample demonstrated that 78% of participants met the criteria for hypertension and 9% for diabetes. Future analyses will include regression analysis controlling for housing status, use of food stamps, and length of time living with housing insecurity. Results will address how food insecurity and embodied psychosocial stress are related among PEH.



The effects of environmental risk and market integration on parental investments in Chakaria, Bangladesh

Nafi Mohammad Ali1, Mary Katherine Shenk1, Manzoor Ahmed Hanifi2, Nurul Alam2

1Department of Anthropology, Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania; 2Health Systems and Population Studies Division, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research (icddr,b), Dhaka, Bangladesh

Parental investment has been theorized in evolutionary anthropology to be undergoing optimization by natural selection for maximizing inclusive fitness while variation in such investment behavior exists due to socio-ecological differences. While market integration has been predicted to influence parents to invest more in their offspring, environmental risk--particularly risks that are beyond the control of parents--has been predicted to influence parents to invest less. We test the relative influence of these two socioecological drivers of parental investment in relation to child health and education.

We use sociodemographic surveys and anthropometric measurements of 80 mothers and education data and anthropometric measurements of 134 of their children aged 0 to 19 from 4 purposively sampled villages from Chakaria, Bangladesh which vary in terms of their levels of market integration (MI) and environmental risk (ER) (high MI high ER, high MI low ER, low MI high ER, low MI high ER).

We conduct multiple linear regression to observe the influence of MI (measured by distance from market, ownership of consumer goods and nature of social interactions) and ER (measured by perceived food security and exposure to water salinity, cyclone and floods) on parental investment (measured by time and resource investment) controlling for family structure and family wealth. For the outcomes of child growth, nutrition and education preliminary results suggest positive effects of MI and negative effects of ER. We further investigate (a) whether parental investment mediates these relationships and/or (b) whether there is an interaction between MI and ER.



Relationships between maternal Epstein-Barr virus, COVID-19, and stress in mothers up to 1-year postpartum

Emma Anastasi1, Delaney Glass1,2, Tiffany Pan2, Ryan M. Pace3, Janet E. Williams4, Sylvia H. Ley5, Celestina Barbosa-Leiker6, Mark A. McGuire4, Michelle K. McGuire3, Courtney L. Meehan7, Melanie Martin1,2

1Department of Anthropology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA; 2Center for Studies in Demography and Ecology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA; 3Margaret Ritchie School of Family and Consumer Sciences, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID; 4Department of Animal, Veterinary and Food Sciences, University of Idaho Moscow, ID; 5Department of Epidemiology, Tulane University School of Public Health, New Orleans, LA; 6College of Nursing, Washington State University Health Sciences Spokane, Spokane, WA; 7Department of Anthropology, Washington State University, Pullman, WA

Both psychosocial stress and current infection can increase the likelihood of reactivation of latent Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV). Pregnancy and infection with COVID-19 can be stressful and suppress immune function. However, it has not yet been examined how COVID-19 infection and stress may interact among recently postpartum women to affect EBV reactivation.

We examined associations between COVID-19 infection, stress, and EBV antibodies in data collected from 45 breastfeeding U.S. women (1-18 months postpartum) during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Between June 2020-March 2022, stress survey data and capillary dried blood spot (DBS) samples were collected from 25 COVID-19 infected and 20 non-infected participants at multiple time points over the course of 60 days. DBS samples (N = 104) were later assayed for EBV.

The relationships between COVID-19 infection, stress, and EBV were analyzed via alternate mixed-effects regression models, adjusting for time postpartum and time elapsed since recruitment. The effect of COVID-19 status on EBV concentration was negligible, with wide overlapping confidence intervals. Average stress levels were also not consistently associated with EBV levels. Results suggest that EBV concentrations were not substantially elevated within sample participants by the mild COVID-19 infection and moderate stress they experienced.



An evolutionary medicine and life history perspective on later life disease risks: The antagonistic roles of mTOR, IGF-1, AMPK, and Klotho

Jacob E Aronoff, Benjamin C Trumble

Arizona State University

Recent decades have seen an alarming rise in prevalence of non-communicable diseases in later life, including cardiovascular and neurodegenerative diseases, type 2 diabetes, kidney and liver disease, and cancer. Here we draw two main insights from the related and complementary perspectives of evolutionary medicine and life history theory to understand this development. Organisms are expected to optimally shift between states of growth/proliferation and maintenance/dormancy depending on nutrient availability/scarcity in their environment. Additionally, there is a mismatch of modern industrialized environments with caloric excess and sedentary behavior contributes to disease development through chronic activation of growth/proliferation and limited activation of maintenance/dormancy. To illustrate this point, we highlight major mechanisms of growth/proliferation (IGF-1, mTOR) and maintenance/dormancy (AMPK, Klotho), including their important functions throughout life and dysfunction in modern health risks. We also propose new research directions based on this perspective, including (1) the study of these pathways in subsistence populations, in which caloric excess and sedentary behavior are limited, (2) potential developmental programming, and (3) their role in linking social inequality to health in industrialized populations. Finally, we make predictions that might benefit therapeutics, including (1) biological degeneracy, in which inhibiting one growth/proliferation pathway might lead to other compensating pathways maintaining activation, (2) balancing activation of growth/proliferation and maintenance/dormancy to avoid introducing different health risks (“Goldilocks zone”), and (3) the greater efficacy of prevention while working with an “in-tact” coordinated system, as opposed to a dysregulated system with full disease progression.



Increased vulnerability to dehydration and heat stress among pregnant and lactating Daasanach women in northern Kenya

Suha Arshad1, Kedir Teji Roba2, Hannah Jacobson3, Natalie Carol Meriwether2, Anna Tavormina4, Amanda McGrosky5, Srishti Sadhir6, Grace Khosi7, Nicole Lynn Bobbie2, Rosemary Nzunza8, David Braun9, Emmanuel Ndiema7, Herman Pontzer4,6, Asher Rosinger2,10

1Department of Anthropology, Vanderbilt University, United States of America; 2Department of Biobehavioral Health, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA; 3Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL; 4Global Health Institute, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA; 5Department of Biology, Elon University, Elon, NC; 66 Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Durham, NC; 7Department of Earth Sciences, National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya; 8Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), Nairobi, Kenya; 9Center for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology, The George Washington University, Washington D.C; 10Department of Anthropology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA

Climate change is intensifying heat stress, water scarcity, and altering hydration dynamics globally. This is of particular concern to vulnerable groups such as women in reproductive roles because dehydration during pregnancy and lactation affects maternal and infant outcomes by impairing prenatal development and decreasing breast milk production. Therefore, understanding how heat stress affects hydration status across reproductive states is crucial. This study explores the relationship between ambient heat stress as indicated by Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT) and hydration status measured using urine specific gravity (Usg) among Daasanach semi-nomadic women in northern Kenya. Between 2019 and 2024, 558 observations were collected from 294 women—pregnant, lactating, and non-pregnant non-lactating (NPNL). Results from mixed effects logistic regressions indicate heat stress was associated with a 53% increase in the odds of dehydration (Usg > 1.020) regardless of reproductive status across all years (OR=1.53; 95% CI: 1.24-1.88; p<0.001). Lactating women had higher average Usg values (B=0.0015; 95% CI: 0.000032-0.0030; p=0.045) than their NPNL counterparts. Additionally, compared to NPNL women, lactating women in 2023 and 2024 had a 0.39 point (SE=0.18; p=0.031) increase in heat perception with every 1ºC increase in WBGT; while pregnant women experienced a 0.63 point (SE=0.10; p=0.015) increase in thirst perception, indicated by a greater sensation of mouth dryness. These results illustrate that heat stress significantly impacts hydration and thermal heat perception among lactating and pregnant women, highlighting the need for maternal health interventions that ensure clean water access and mitigate heat stress.



Exploring trauma, mental health, and resilience during the Palestinian genocide: A literature review.

Sameeha Atout1,2, Andrew Wooyoung Kim1

1Department of Anthropology, University of California Berkeley, United States of America; 2Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, An-Najah National University, Nablus, Palestine

Israel’s ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, and increasingly in the West Bank, began taking the form of a genocide in October 2023. To date, over 7.9% of the population of Gaza has been killed, and thousands of others have faced myriad forms of violence and imminent threats to life, including physical injuries from ballistics, punitive home demolitions, and grotesque forms of torture. These highly traumatic conditions pose severe threats to the mental health and livelihood of Palestinians, and researchers have recently begun to document the psychological toll of the ongoing genocide. This literature review examines the experiences of trauma, mental health, and resilience among Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, refugee camps, and across the Palestinian diaspora since October 2023. Twenty-one empirical articles were identified from five major search engines, including PubMed, Scopus, SpringerLink, Proquest, and Google Scholar. Study samples were largely comprised of college students, healthcare workers, and refugees. Studies reported high prevalence rates of sleep disturbances (77.9%), symptoms of anxiety (60.9-77.3%), depression (65.9-69%), and post-traumatic stress disorder (71.3%). Several studies also identified coping resources among Palestinians, including spirituality, social and family support, post-secondary education, economic resources, and the socio-religious concept of steadfastness (sumud), which contributed to their overall resilience. These results highlight the early psychological effects of the genocide among Palestinians in the Gaza Strip and beyond. Future research on the intergenerational effects of trauma will determine the extent to which future generations are affected by current conditions of genocidal violence.



Integration to market economies and secular changes in anthropometric characteristics of Maya children from Yucatan, Mexico

Hugo Azcorra1, Julio Cesar Lara-Riegos2, Maria Teresa Castillo-Burguete3, Nina Méndez-Domínguez4, Juan Carlos Salazar-Rendón5, C. Marjorie Aelion6, Thomas Leatherman7

1Centro de Investigaciones Silvio Zavala, Universidad Modelo, Mérida, México; 2Facultad de Química, Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán. Mérida, México; 3Centro de Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados del Instituto Politécnico Nacional. Mérida, México; 4Hospital Regional de Alta Especialidad de la Península de Yucatán, IMSS-BIENESTAR. Mérida, México; 5Dirección de Nutrición, Secretaría de Salud de Yucatán. Mérida, México; 6Department of Environmental Health Sciences, School of Public Health & Health Sciences, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA; 7Department of Anthropology, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA

The integration of rural communities in low- and middle-income countries into globalizing market economies tends to show both positive and negative effects on children's growth and nutritional status. We recently concluded a study conducted in two Maya communities in Yucatan, Mexico, in which we analyzed secular changes in the anthropometric characteristics of children by comparing data collected during the 1980s and 1990s with data obtained during the last fieldwork season in 2022 and 2023. The communities differ in the time of the beginning of their integration into the economic and sociocultural dynamics of tourism: Yalcoba in the early 1970s and Dzeal in the early 2000s. This process has implied a gradual reduction of dependence of agriculture for self-consumption and the incorporation of the population into the salaried labor market in the main tourist centers of the region. Stunting prevalence have decreased between 61% and 81% in 6-to-12 years of children from 1986 to 2023. Estimates of total height (z-scores) increases were higher in the community that still preserves rural characteristics and has been incorporated more recently into the tourism economy (1.80 SD vs 0.42 SD for boys and 2.42 SD vs 1.64 SD for girls). There were substantial increases in the percentage of excess body weight during the studied period (23% to 45%) but more dramatically during 2000-2020. In boys, the increase in BMI (z-scores) was greater in the community with more time of integration into the market economy (1.09 SD vs. 0.68 SD) during the entire studied period.



Ecologies of death: culture, religion, ecology, and mortuary practices in Tanna, Vanuatu

Patrick Baca1, Eddy Kiel2, Siobhán M. Cully3

1University of New Mexico, Department of Biology, Albuquerque, NM; 2Independent Scholar, Vanuatu; 3University of New Mexico, Department of Anthropology, Albuquerque, NM

Death and dying evoke significantly different beliefs and practices across cultures. Socio-cutural variation in norms and institutions are often emphasized as sources of variation in death rituals. However, environmental variation also contributes significantly to variation in death practices and belief systems. This study investigates interactions between social and physical ecologies in the context of mortuary practices in Tanna, Vanuatu – a context where climate change and an influx of Christian faiths may contribute to changing norms and institutions surrounding death. We conducted interviews with ni-Vanuatu people to understand intersections between death, spirituality, and nature in a remote ni-Vanuatu population. We describe evidence of religious syncretism in death practices and speculate about how climate change will impact landscapes of death for ni-Vanuatu people. We emphasize the need to integrate cultural and ecological predictors of belief systems and related norms as adaptation to changing landscapes impacts human life histories, from birth to death.



Expanding anthropological methods: Detecting lymphocyte anergy using minimally-invasive techniques

Jade Alexandra Beauregard, Elizabeth Anne Quinn, Theresa Elizabeth Gildner

Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO

Anergy describes a state in which B and T lymphocytes, white blood cells that identify and directly respond to antigens, are rendered unresponsive to antigenic stimulation, preventing an overactive immune response. In some cases, autoreactive lymphocytes are made anergic as a safeguard against autoimmunity. While this mechanism is essential for maintaining immunological tolerance, it has been hypothesized that anergic lymphocytes may be reactivated during infections like COVID-19. This reactivation might constitute an effort by the immune system to mobilize all available resources to fight the pathogen, even at the risk of triggering autoimmunity. Studying the trade-off between immune activation and tolerance may offer insights into how pathogens have shaped human health and susceptibility to autoimmune diseases.

In biological anthropology, research on autoimmunity has focused on evolutionary mismatch, genetic predisposition, and the microbiome. Logistical constraints have historically restricted blood sample collection to dried blood spots, limiting available analyses. The large blood volume required by fluorescence-assisted cell sorting (FACS), the gold standard for detecting lymphocyte sub-populations in immunology, has precluded its use in anthropological studies. However, the TAP MicroSelect II (a minimally-invasive, microneedle-based capillary blood collection device) offers a novel approach that may overcome previous logistical challenges, enabling more detailed study of immune markers in the field. This review explores the potential of using FACS with TAP-collected capillary blood as a method for studying immune function in anthropology.

By assessing advancements in capillary blood collection and immunological techniques, we aim to expand the methodological toolkit available to anthropologists studying immune responses.



How valid are parent-report dietary assessment tools for estimating young children’s dietary intake? A systematic review

Traci A Bekelman1, Fadia Chehadeh1, Catherine C Cohen1, Celeste Connell1, Roberta Gomez Diaz Barreiro1, Christopher Hollander1, Kameron J Moding2, Christi Piper3, Alexandra Stamatoiu1, Cindy Zavala1

1Lifecourse Epidemiology of Adiposity and Diabetes (LEAD) Center, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, Colorado; 2Department of Human Development & Family Science, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana; 3Strauss Health Sciences Library, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, Colorado

Background: Obtaining accurate estimates of children’s dietary intake is important because these estimates are used to characterize diet-disease relationships and describe diet-related inequities. This review synthesized findings from validation studies of dietary assessment tools in which parents were proxy-reporters for their children.

Methods: Database searches (Medline, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane) for validation studies of dietary assessment tools used for estimating daily intake of macronutrients, micronutrients, vitamins, or food groups yielded 3,256 citations. Articles were uploaded to Covidence for screening. Seventy-two articles met the inclusion criteria. The JBI Checklist for Analytical Cross-sectional Studies was used to assess the quality of included articles.

Results: Studies were conducted on 6 continents. Median sample size was 100. Eighty-three percent of studies validated a food frequency questionnaire; the remainder validated diet recalls (8%) or other tools (8%). Many studies (62%) used another parent-proxy report tool as the reference method. For macronutrients and micronutrients, two-thirds of the studies reported a statistically significant correlation between the assessment tool and reference method. The mean correlation for each macronutrient or micronutrient ranged from 0.36 to 0.57. Studies were limited by lack of generalizability, use of reference methods prone to measurement error, and misalignment between the assessment tool and reference method.

Conclusions: This review of validation studies found no correlation or low-to-moderate correlations between dietary assessment tools and the reference method. The included studies had significant methodological limitations. Future studies should validate parent-proxy report dietary assessments against objective measures. The development of novel assessment tools may also be warranted.



Pre-med students’ cortisol profiles, anxiety, and social support dynamics while preparing for the Medical College Admissions Test (MCAT)

Lauren Elise Bell, Elsa Mueller-Filipas, Lee T Gettler

University of Notre Dame, United States of America

College is fraught with academic challenges that contribute to psychosocial stress, with implications for students’ mental well-being. For college students aspiring to medical school, The Medical College Admissions Test (MCAT) becomes a high-stakes, significant stressor that can be accompanied by feelings of lack of control and demands exceeding resources. Such pressures can trigger an increase in cortisol production as an adaptive response, though chronic activation has been associated with health problems. Drawing on a small longitudinal study of undergraduates (N=20), this project aimed to test whether (1) students’ diurnal profiles for cortisol were flatter across the day as the MCAT approached, (2) students' perceptions of social support, anxiety, and stress changed as the MCAT approached and (3) how those changes related to cortisol profiles. Students reported much higher anxiety in the 2-3 days prior to the MCAT, compared to a month prior (p=0.018). Perceived stress also increased modestly but not significantly as the exam neared, while social support did not (p>0.1). Preliminary analyses indicate that students' cortisol levels and diurnal curves were similar at both time points, but with some indication that women's cortisol diurnal curves may have become steeper near the time of the MCATs. These patterns await further testing. Additionally, students who felt better supported reported significantly lower stress and anxiety (p<0.05), consistent with a protective role of support during high-stakes periods. This study’s findings help underscore the importance of supporting university student mental well-being, particularly during times of heightened pressure.



Changes in risk factors for postmenopausal breast cancer among Bangladeshi migrants in London

Gillian R Bentley1, Carlye Chaney2, Robert T Chatterton3, Lauren C Houghton4, Shanthi Muttukrishna5, Alejandra Núñez-de la Mora6, Lynnette L Sievert7

1Durham University, United Kingdom; 2Washington University of St Louis, MO; 3Northwestern University, Chicago, IL; 4Columbia University, New York, NY; 5University of Cork, Cork, Ireland; 6Universidad Veracruzana, Mexico; 7University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA

While breast cancer (BC) rates are low in South Asia (SA), BC rates increase among SA migrants to the UK and USA. We argue this increase occurs in postmenopausal, receptor positive (rather than premenopausal, receptor negative) BC and explore contributing factors from three studies of British-Bangladeshi migrants: i) Puberty Study, 2009-11, 468 girls aged 5-16; ii) Reproduction Study, 2002-3, 227 women aged 18-39; iii) Menopause Study, 2006-10, 534 women aged 35-59. Data included hormone levels, length of reproductive lifespan, diet and anthropometrics, breastfeeding and physical activity. All studies followed the same design, and included participants living in Sylhet, northeast Bangladesh (sedenteesfrom where most British-Bangladeshi migrants originate, migrants who moved to the UK as children or adults, and individuals of European ancestry living in similar neighborhoods. Migrants who arrived early in childhood and second-generation British-Bangladeshis had higher levels of salivary progesterone, earlier menarche and later menopause than sedentees in Bangladesh. Migrant women reduced the length but not incidence of breastfeeding. Following migration, consumption of meat, dairy products, snacks and sugary drinks increased, and vegetable and rice intake declined. BMI and waist circumference increased significantly among migrants relative to sedentees. Migrants from the Menopause Study had significantly lower levels of Vitamin D (25-hydroxyvitamin D) compared to sedentees and white women. Physical activity increased among women following migration relative to sedentees but remained lower than white women. Lifestyle factors associated with risk for postmenopausal BC change among Bangladeshi migrants to England and help to explain increased BC rates among SA migrant women.



Associations between infant body composition, breastfeeding practices, and maternal perception of infant eating behavior in Samoan mother-infant dyads aged 1-4 months

Victoria Bertacchi1,2, Katherine Daiy1,2, Lupesina Vesi2, Kima Faaselele-Savusa2, Aniva Reupena2, Take Naseri3, Christina Soti-Ulberg3, Jyothi Abraham4, Richard G Bribiescas1, Nicola L Hawley1,2

1Yale University, United States of America; 2Obesity, Lifestyle and Genetic Adaptations (OLaGA) Study Group, Apia, Samoa; 3Ministry of Health, Apia, Samoa; 4School of Nursing, National University of Samoa, Apia, Samoa

Breastfeeding reduces the risk of childhood and adult obesity. The current World Health Organization recommendations are to breastfeed exclusively for 6 months and to continue giving human milk alongside the introduction of solid foods for up to 2 years of age or beyond. Initiation of breastfeeding is almost universal in Samoa (~90%), but there is opportunity to increase the proportion of infants exclusively breastfed to 6 months (51.7%). Little is known about how Samoan mothers perceive infant appetite in breastfed infants, which has implications for early cessation of exclusive breastfeeding and introduction of solid foods and/or formula. We administered the Baby Eating Behaviour Questionnaire (BEBQ) to n=100 mothers of exclusively breastfed infants aged 1-4 months alongside the collection of maternal and infant anthropometrics, information on breastfeeding practices, and maternal/household demographic characteristics. BEBQ constructs - Food Responsiveness, Enjoyment of Food, Satiety Responsiveness, Slowness in Eating, and General Appetite – were analyzed using Pearson correlations for their associations with maternal and infant characteristics. Factors that influenced maternal perception of infant eating behavior in our sample were infant size, infant age, feeding routine, average feeding bout length, and maternal confidence in milk supply. As confidence in milk quantity is one of the leading reasons cited for early cessation of breastfeeding, the results of the BEBQ outcomes in this study may shed light on how maternal perception of insufficient milk may be impacting their view on their infant’s eating behavior and patterns.



High degree of variation among mtDNA haplogroups in two Amazonian horticulturalist populations

Egda Desirée Bogen1, Suhail Ghafoor1, Dan K Cummings3, Paul L Hooper3, Heather Highland4, Kari E North4, Daniel Eid Rodriguez9, Gregory S Thomas5, Jonathan Stieglitz6, Michael Gurven7, Amanda J Lea8, Margaret Gatz2, Caleb E Finch2, Hilly Kaplan3, Ben C Trumble1, Kenneth H Buetow1

1Arizona State University, United States of America; 2Leonard Davis School of Gerontology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California; 3Economic Science Institute, Chapman University, Orange, California; 4Department of Epidemiology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; 5Heart and Vascular Institute, MemorialCare Health System, Fountain Valley, California; 6Institute for Advanced Study, Toulouse School of Economics, Toulouse, France; 7Integrative Anthropological Sciences, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California; 8Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee; 9Universidad San Simon, Cochabamba Bolivia

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variability can reveal group-level differences in

evolutionary history and have implications for health resilience. However, most mtDNA

research is conducted in industrialized populations, limiting our understanding of global

variation. We examined WGS mtDNA profiles among the Tsimane and Moseten, two

indigenous horticulturalist populations in the Bolivian Amazon, to better understand

genetic variation and its implications for health.

Our analysis of 88 unrelated, healthy individuals found that, although the Tsimane and Moseten align with haplogroups A2, B2, and C, only 20 samples fell within 90% accuracy of their assigned groups. A significant proportion (68 individuals) displayed greater genetic distance (77%-88%) from established haplogroups, suggesting unique sub-haplogroups. Notably, individuals in haplogroup B2 (n = 36) share novel nondiagnostic variants—16519C, 310T, 3795T, 8270C, and 204C, as well as a 9bp duplication at 8281—that can provide insights into their evolutionary history. The majority of unique variants identified were in the control region and D-loop, consistent with existing literature.

All variants in coding regions were synonymous, indicating conservation of function. Importantly, no variants that have been previously associated with cardiovascular disease are found within the Tsimane and Moseten. Among the 88 individuals, all exhibited three or fewer heteroplasmic variants (5% to 95% heteroplasmic frequency). A recent study observed 10 or more heteroplasmic variants per individual with hypertension in industrialized populations, but hypertension is uncommon among the Tsimane. Our findings underscore the need for greater diversity in health studies to understand how genetic variation influences health outcomes across different populations.



Evaluating the use of dried blood spots and whole capillary blood to measure aging biomarkers in a geriatric population 

Willow Butler1, Jacob Griffin1, David Lynch2, Mark Sorensen1

1Department of Anthropology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; 2School of Medicine, Division of Geriatric Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

There is growing evidence to support the use of aging biomarkers to predict geriatric syndromes as well as hospitalization and mortality outcomes in older adults. Broad-based interventions are limited due to the lack of cost-effective, non-invasive techniques. The use of dried blood spots from a fingerstick or Tasso+ device (a home-blood spot collection device) may be a less invasive alternative to venous blood collection in older adults. The purpose of this study is to explore the use of blood spot and capillary whole blood for measurement of aging biomarkers in a home-dwelling geriatric population. This study compared blood spot collection using both a Tasso+ device and fingerstick, relative to venous blood, for analysis of 4 aging biomarkers (TNFR, IL-6, IGFBP-1, GDF-15). Samples were collected simultaneously in 14 community-dwelling adults aged 73-95. Passing-Bablok regression of venipuncture values on DBS-to-plasma equivalencies provided Kendall’s τ (a nonparametric measure of correlation) values for TNFR, IL-6, IGFBP-1, and GDF-15 of 0.46, 0.15, 0.69, and 0.49, respectively. The Passing-Bablok regressions of venipuncture values on Tasso-to-plasma equivalencies provided Kendall’s τ values for TNFR, IL-6, IGFBP-1, and GDF-15 of 0.73, 0.54, 0.87, and 0.33, respectively. Based on a Bland-Altman analysis, there was no evidence of systematic bias between venipuncture and DBS. For TNFR, IGFBP-1, and GDF-15, precision decreased at higher values; precision was low for IL-6 across all values. These results indicate that DBS may be a feasible method for biomarker assessment in aging populations. However, Tasso+ requires further investigation with a larger sample.



Elucidating the causal pathway linking social determinants of health to changes in the gut microbiome through inflammatory pathways in two low-resource U.S. communities

Carlye Brennan Chaney1,2, Theresa E Gildner3, Tara J Cepon-Robins4, Kiersten Grathwohl1, Shan Wang1, Jennifer Ong1, Leena Kwak1, Kaylaa Betts1, Jade Beauregard3, Katherine L Nemeth3, Sophie Waimon3, Angela Zhang3, Alexander B Shing3, Lizzy Kim5, Marcela Pfaff-Nash5, Anna Samsonov5, Samuel S Urlacher5, Elizabeth Mallott1

1Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 2Department of Anthropology, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO; 3Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 4Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado Colorado Springs, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 5Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, Texas

The gut microbiome has numerous impacts on human health, including gastrointestinal and cardiovascular disease risk. While the social determinants of health (SDoH) are established predictors of human gut microbiome composition, few studies have assessed both the direct and indirect effects of multiple SDoH in driving microbiome diversity. In this project, we investigated the causal pathways linking SDoH to changes in the gut microbiome in two low-resource U.S. communities. Specifically, we collected questionnaire data, dried blood spots (DBS), and fecal samples from 172 individuals in Mississippi (n = 77) and Illinois (n = 95) in 2022-2023 (age range = 3-79). Measures of SDoH included household income, individual healthcare access, individual education, household homeownership, and household food insecurity. We identified bacterial diversity from the fecal samples using 16S rRNA sequencing and calculated alpha diversity (Faith’s phylogenetic diversity, Shannon diversity, and Pielou's evenness) and beta diversity (weighted and unweighted UniFrac) in QIIME2. Using structural equation modeling, we found that DBS C-reactive protein (CRP; a measure of systemic inflammation), positively predicted Faith’s PD (Chi Sq = 4.71, p = 0.03). Moreover, several SDoH were associated with CRP, with the largest effect size for overcrowding (Chi Sq = 3.54, p = 0.05). These results provide support for the conceptual model in which SDoH affect the gut microbiome through inflammatory pathways. This research advances our understanding of how structural and social factors contribute to the health effects of inequality, producing data that can be used to inform public health interventions.



The embodied colonial legacies of the “Anglophone Problem”: birth and prenatal care at the axis of sociolinguistic marginalization

Ca'la Kian Connors, Christopher Kuzawa

Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, United States of America

Cameroon is unique in Africa for having two colonial languages spoken in geographically distinct regions, due to its history of split colonial rule under the British and the French. The francophone population constitutes roughly 80% of the total, making anglophones a sociolinguistic minority who have long claimed marginalization by the francophone majority and government. Little research has explored how this structural marginalization impacts the health of anglophone Cameroonians, which may contribute to health disparities through immediate adult health effects and intergenerational stress transmission.

Using 2011 Demographic and Health Survey data, we examine infant birthweight and prenatal care access, comparing outcomes between urban anglophone and francophone regions. The sample (N=871) includes infants born to women aged 20-34, living in urban regions, who gave birth within the five years before the survey. No significant differences were found in c-section rates, or number of prenatal appointments attended, though women in anglophone regions had their first prenatal visit three weeks later (p<0.00) than those in francophone regions. Despite this, infants born in anglophone regions (N=115) were on average 100g heavier than those born in francophone regions (N=756), with the difference trending toward significance (p<0.09). Women in anglophone regions, on average, were less educated, more likely to give birth in a private facility, less wealthy, and more primiparous relative to women in francophone regions, however, these differences were not significant.

Future work should establish whether these apparent differences are due to systematic biases in representation in the sample, to some protective factors, or both.



Coping with water insecurity: women's strategies and emotional responses in Iztapalapa, Mexico City

Paloma Contreras, Tina Lasisi

University of Michigan, United States of America

Water insecurity in urban areas presents distinctive challenges, particularly in marginalized communities. While past studies have documented how households adapt to poor water services, many of these coping strategies come at a significant personal cost. Here we examine the coping strategies and emotional impacts of unreliable water services among 400 women in Iztapalapa, Mexico City. Data were collected through surveys over the Fall of 2022 and Spring of 2023. We assessed household water access, water management practices, and emotional responses to local water services. Results indicate that during acute water shortages, women can spend extended periods (several hours, or sometimes days) waiting for water trucks. Additionally, 57% of respondents reported feeling frustrated or angry about their water situation, while around 20% experienced family conflicts over water use or community-level conflicts around water management, often involving water vendors or government services. This study offers one of the first in-depth examinations of how water insecurity specifically affects women in Iztapalapa, a densely populated region of Mexico City with severe water access challenges. The findings highlight the urgent need for policy interventions that address water insecurity with a gender-sensitive approach, recognizing the disproportionate burden placed on women as primary water managers in their households.



Does body surface area predict core temperature change? Preliminary results from four climatic exposures

Libby Cowgill1, Michelle Hoskins1, Cara Ocobock2, Elizabeth Cho3, Scott Maddux3

1University of Missouri, Columbia; 2University of Notre Dame; 3University of North Texas, Health Science Center

Ecogeographic patterns in human body form have been well documented in living populations, skeletal collections, and fossil remains, and human variation generally conforms to the predictions of Bergmann’s (1947) and Allen’s (1877) rules. Specifically, populations from colder climates tend to exhibit relatively lower surface area to volume ratios (SA/V) and those from warmer environments display higher SA/V ratios, which is hypothesized to aid in heat retention in colder climates and heat dissipation in warmer ones. Recent research, however, has questioned whether these patterns are a product of climate-related selection pressure, or an artifact of population history. Before proposing evolutionary hypotheses regarding the development of human body form, functional links between anatomy and thermoregulatory physiology must be validated.

To this end, this study investigated the relationship between body surface area (BSA) and core temperature change in five males and five females exposed to four climatic conditions in a walk-in climate chamber: control (22°C, 50% RH), cold (5°C, 80% RH), hot/dry (44°C, 15% RH), and hot/humid (39°C, 85% RH). Prior to each 45 minute exposure, participants ingested an eCelsius sensor, which allows continuous core temperature monitoring at 15 seconds intervals, and heat loss/gain was quantified as change in core temperature during exposure. Total BSA was calculated using full body computed tomography scans of each participant. Results suggest that the relationship between core temperature and BSA vary by climatic exposure. Future research will both expand the study sample size and explore more complex relationships between BSA and skin temperature change.



BDNF methylation during adrenarche and its association with early life social-emotional environment

Tristan T Cruz, Elizabeth A Holdsworth

The Ohio State University, United States of America

Adrenarche is hypothesized to provide protection to a rapidly developing brain during this time (6-8 years of age), through increased production of DHEA/S, which has antioxidant properties and supports brain energetics. Brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) proteins are critical for neurodevelopment and are encoded by the BDNF gene. As such, BDNF gene expression should covary with the timing of adrenarche. Previous research indicates that early life stress and social-emotional environments might affect maturational timing, though few studies have explored adrenarcheal timing. This analysis tested two hypotheses: 1) BDNF epigenetic expression during adrenarche is associated with DHEA-S and 2) the social-emotional environment in infancy is associated with variation in BDNF methylation and DHEA-S concentrations in adrenarche. A secondary data analysis of the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) compared differences in the methylation of 77 BDNF CpG sites from birth to 7.5 years of age (n=927), the association of BDNF methylation with DHEA-S concentrations at 8.5 years of age (n=162), and observed maternal-infant interaction quality (n=109). Paired t-tests showed that 45 CpG sites’ and average BDNF methylation were different from birth to 7.5 years of age (p<0.05). Logged DHEA-S concentrations were not correlated with the 12 most variable CpG sites (>0.05 s.d.) or with average BDNF methylation. Two CpG sites were positively correlated with maternal-infant interaction measures (maternal control, warmth, and non-verbal communication). This indicates that BDNF methylation might be independent of adrenarche biomarkers but might be slightly affected by the social-emotional environment in infancy.



Inking of Immunity: Does oxytocin mediate the relationship between tattooing and immune function in Samoa?

Adam Daly1, Siobhán M. Cully2, Tomasz Nowack3, Michael Muehlenbein3, Christopher D. Lynn4

1Dublin City University, Department of Psychology, Ireland; 2University of New Mexico, Department of Anthropology, Albuquerque, NM; 3Baylor University, Department of Anthropology, Waco, TX; 4University of Alabama, Department of Anthropology, Tuscaloosa, AL

Tattooing is a well-documented, yet potentially costly, form of cultural self-expression and identity. Previous research by members of our team revealed relationships between an individual’s cultural valuation of tattooing, immune suppression, and inflammation, suggesting that, contrary to prior expectations, risk of tattoo-related infection is well buffered by immune activation during tattooing. This includes findings showing higher bacteria-killing activity (BKA) after getting a new tattoo (β = 0.48, p = 0.01) relative to pre-tattoo baseline and other changes in immune activity over the course of tattooing. This study builds on prior investigations by asking whether oxytocin serves as a physiological marker of cultural valuation and whether it contributes to anti-inflammatory effects of tattooing. Doing so bridges work in non-human animals showing anti-inflammatory effects of circulating peripheral oxytocin and work in humans supporting the role of oxytocin as a physiological marker of social bonding and belonging.



Placental pathways of stress: Investigating the interplay between social and physical stressors in Birth Outcomes

L J Daniels-Day, E A Quinn

Washington University in Saint Louis, Missouri

Background: The placenta plays many critical roles in fetal development, acting as the conduit between the gestational parent and the developing fetus. Physical and social stressors are associated with abnormal placenta development, structure, and function which has the potential to impact pregnancy outcomes and long-term health of the parent and infant (Barker 1997).

Methods: We conducted a scoping review following the PRISMA-ScR guidelines. We searched databases (PubMed & SCOPUS). After screening 946 articles, we included 504 studies that examined how maternal stress affects placental function, structure, or gene expression. We excluded studies that did not focus on human placental adaptations to stress or were not published in English. We extracted data on stress types (e.g., psychosocial, nutritional, environmental), biological markers (e.g., cortisol), and placental outcomes (e.g., vascularization, hormone production, gene expression and analyzed for themes and mechanisms using NVivo.

Results: We found that 55% of studies reported maternal stress significantly affected placental development. Three primary pathways emerged: (1) disruptions in hormonal signaling, including altered cortisol regulation and increased placental CRH production; (2) heightened inflammation, indicated by elevated levels of cytokines, such as IL-6; (3) impaired vascularization, leading to reduced placental blood flow and angiogenesis. Stress-related changes in placental gene expression, particularly in glucocorticoid receptor regulation, were linked to increased fetal exposure to maternal stress hormones.

Conclusion: The placenta plays a key role in buffering and transmitting maternal stress to the fetus. Our review highlights the importance of understanding these mechanisms to mitigate stress-related pregnancy complications and improve birth outcomes.



Perceptions and utilization of antibiotics among Samoan mothers: a thematic analysis

Katherine Daiy1,2, Kima Savusa2, Lupesina Vesi2, Faafofola Unasa2, Jyothi Abraham3,4, Take Naseri3, Christina Soti-Ulberg3, Analosa Magele3, Billie White5, Claudia Valeggia1, Nicola Hawley1,2,6

1Yale University, United States of America; 2Obesity, Lifestyle and Genetic Adaptations (OLaGA) Study Group, Apia, Samoa; 3Ministry of Health, Apia, Samoa; 4School of Nursing, National University of Samoa, Apia, Samoa; 5Yale School of Nursing, New Haven, CT; 6Department of Chronic Disease Epidemiology, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, CT

Antibiotic medications are lifesaving inventions, yet have negative impacts on the human microbiome, especially in early life. Women with young children are central health decision-makers in many societies; thus, understanding how they perceive and utilize antibiotic medications in the household is a key step in illuminating early contexts of antibiotic use. This qualitative study explores how in Samoa — a nation with high antibiotic use but strong public health messaging on antibiotic stewardship — mothers of young infants perceive and utilize antibiotics. We conducted an inductive thematic analysis of 30 semi-structured interviews administered to Samoan women with eight-month-old infants. Three themes emerged: benefits/risks and effectiveness of antibiotics, utilization of antibiotics, and perceptions of the relationship between breastfeeding and antibiotics. Samoan women viewed antibiotics as powerful medications that were able to target symptoms and disease agents, yet the same women described antibiotics as having risks, including side effects, bodily imbalance and overreliance, unknown chemical compositions, possible ineffectiveness at treating symptoms, and specific risks to vulnerable populations such as pregnant women. Women described always following healthcare providers’ instructions when they or their infants were prescribed antibiotics, always discarding leftover doses, and either finishing an antibiotic when “feeling better” or at the end of the prescription. Lastly, women described breastfeeding as having disease-fighting properties similar to those of antibiotics. These findings contextualize early life antibiotic use, a key factor shaping infant microbiota and potentially, later-life health.



Intersecting Identities and Health: Exploring Social Determinants of Health and Black Masculinities in Ibero-America

Rosseirys Noelia De La Rosa1, Anderson Reis de Sousa3, Johis Ortega2

1Vanderbilt University, United States of America; 2School of Nursing and Health Studies, University of Miami, United States of America; 3Escola de Enfermagem, Universidade Federal da Bahia (UFBA), Salvador Bahia, Brasil

OBJECTIVE: Through a focus on how racial and gender identities influence health experiences, this research highlights barriers Black men in Ibero-America face in accessing care, aiming to inform strategies to improve health outcomes.

METHODS: A qualitative web-based survey was conducted between May and September 2024 with 80 men from 12 Ibero-American countries using snowball sampling and netnography on digital platforms such as Instagram®️ (@cuidadosaudehomens). A semi-structured Google Forms®️ survey collected sociodemographic data and responses to open-ended questions about Black masculinity, identity, and health. Data were organized in Excel®️ and analyzed using MAXQDA, applying Reflexive Thematic Content Analysis under COREQ guidelines, deriving 10 initial generative themes and 25 underlying themes, framed by theories of Norm/Normalization, Masculinities, Intersectionality, and Anthropology of Health.

RESULTS: The identified themes include how sociocultural norms pathologize Black identity and the effects of racial discrimination, along with the intersection of racism, heteronormativity, and sexism. These factors contribute to mental and physical health disparities. Traditional masculine norms negatively impact health behaviors, while community cultural interactions, such as involvement in capoeira, promote positive behaviors, demonstrating how social factors shape health outcomes. Education and identity affirmation were also key to improving health outcomes.

CONCLUSION: Intersections of racism, heteronormativity, and harmful masculinity norms significantly shape health outcomes for Black men in Ibero-America. Culturally relevant interventions that promote identity affirmation, community resilience, and education are essential to reducing health disparities and improving well-being, indicating the intersection of social markers of Black men’s difference in relation to social determination of health in this population.



Market integration in an era of disruption: Food access and resilience in Chilean Patagonia

Achsah Foster Dorsey1, Eric Harrion Thomas2

1Department of Anthropolgy, University of Massachusetts - Amherst, United States of America; 2Department of Environmental Conservation, University of Massachusetts - Amherst, United States of America

Recent research on food security assumes households gain and maintain supermarket access through processes of infrastructure development and urbanization and therefore divides households into those with market access and those without. Our work in Chilean Patagonia challenges this interpretation of market integration as it does not accurately represent how people provision their households on the periphery of the global economy. We explored the relationship between household consumption of locally available resources and proximity to globalized research chains in three distinct locations within the Aysén Region: Coyhaique (the capital and administrative center of the area), Puerto Aysén (a large coastal town), and Puerto Aquirre (a small island community). Preliminary data analyses suggest that local resources comprise a greater portion of local diets in Puerto Aysén and Puerto Aquirre and that these resources distributed via community networks reduce household precarity when supply chain disruptions occur. These results suggest a link between household and community resilience when more formal food availability is inconsistent. Further work is needed to explore how the distribution of locally available resources through dynamic community networks impacts household food security, health outcomes, and community resilience to market disruptions. However, this project highlights the need to explore the nuances of market integration within rural communities and revisit market integration perspectives in anthropological research.



Pride protects where it counts: State of residence moderates the relationship between transgender identity-pride and allostatic load

L. Zachary DuBois1, Dee Jolly1, Jae A Puckett2, Sally I Powers3, Debra A Hope4, Richard Mocarski5, Robert-Paul Juster6

1University of Oregon, United States of America; 2Michigan State University, United States of America; 3University of Massachusetts, United States of America; 4University of Nebraska-Lincoln, United States of America; 5Northern Illinois University, United States of America; 6University of Montreal, Canada

Structural and legislative attacks against transgender and nonbinary (TNB) people’s autonomy and self-determination in the United States have grown exponentially over the past five years. A growing body of literature links this stigma to poorer health among TNB people and implicates stigma as a key social determinant of health. In this context, it becomes vital to identify positive factors affecting health, as well as to understand how sociopolitical context may affect these relationships. Using baseline data from the Transgender Health and Resilience Study, a year-long study of stress and resilience among TNB people living in Michigan, Nebraska, Tennessee, and Oregon (N=106), we aimed to understand the relationship between pride in one’s TNB identity and allostatic load and how current state of residence changes this relationship. We indexed allostatic load through quartile-based cutoffs to indicate dysregulation in heart rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, cortisol awakening response, cortisol daily decline, HbA1c, body mass index, and waist-to-hip ratio. Analyses were adjusted for age. No significant association was detected between pride and allostatic load in the full sample. However, current state of residence moderated the relationship between allostatic load and pride, such that the beneficial effects of pride (i.e., a negative association between pride and allostatic load) was only present among those living in Tennessee. Given that Tennessee was the state with the least legislative protection against anti-TNB discrimination, these data suggest the effect of pride in one’s gender identity on health is most salient in more stigmatizing and less protective environments.



The impact of endemic violence on the nutrition of pastoralist adolescents in Northern Kenya

Valentina Dziecinny Vazquez, Aubree Keegan Kaliski, Ivy L. Pike

School of Anthropology, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ

In certain pastoralist communities of East Africa, it is known that stressors directly affect adolescent growth and development. Adolescence is a critical period that demands adequate nutritional intake for physiological processes to be carried out. Stressors in these East African communities can cause delays in adolescent development, which can have downstream, long-term consequences. However, we do not have a complete understanding of the implications of endemic violence on the nutritional health of pastoralist youth in the Pokot and Turkana communities of Northern Kenya. This study aims to address the nutritional status over time of adolescents from these groups who experience widespread intercommunity violence. Our study analyzes anthropometric measurements of adolescents from each community, including stress markers, age, height, weight, skinfold measurements, and food insecurity levels spanning over four years. This study also analyzes additional data from open-ended interviews with community members to give a qualitative perspective to the study. We predict that high levels of stress caused by endemic violence will correlate to nutritional deficits in pastoralist youth. We also predict that chronic violence will have more profound developmental effects on adolescents who experience greater levels of stress across a four-year time period. The findings of this study could offer valuable insight into how an environment afflicted by intercommunity violence influences the health and growth outcomes of pastoralist youth in Northern Kenya.



Comparing policies for mitigating drug-resistant gonorrhea: an agent-based modeling approach

Marcy Ekanayake-Weber1,2,3, Minttu Ronn4, Xuecheng Yin5, Yunfei Li4, Joshua Salomon6, Yonatan Grad7, Reza Yaesoubi1,2

1Health Policy and Management, Yale School of Public Health; 2Public Health Modeling Unit, Yale School of Public Health; 3Department of Anthropology, Stony Brook University; 4Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard University; 5Department of Management Science and Information Systems, Spears School of Business, Oklahoma State University; 6Stanford University School of Medicine; 7Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard University

Gonorrhea transmission is biologically and behaviorally complex, and the disease has a strong propensity for evolving drug resistance. Additionally, marginalized communities experience a disproportionate burden of gonorrhea, particularly the LGBTQ+ community. Thus, tackling this public health problem requires a multi-disciplinary approach, combining socio-cultural, evolutionary, and biomedical perspectives. We set out to compare various public health strategies to mitigating drug-resistant gonorrhea in the US, focusing on cisgender men who have sex with men (“MSM”). To project the population-level impact of these strategies, we developed an agent-based model of gonococcal transmission among MSM, including introduction and transmission of drug-resistant strains. We compared a “surveillance-based” strategy, based on what is currently in place in the US, to several alternative strategies, which assign individual-level treatment regimens in the absence of surveillance information. We used Bayesian melding to calibrate the model against estimates from empirical data on gonorrhea among MSM. All strategies resulted in similar cumulative gonorrhea incidence over 20 years, but strategies varied dramatically in other outcomes. Notably, treatment failure rates were low but reliance on last-line antibiotics was high for the surveillance-based strategy. Further, none of the strategies were effective at preventing the spread of resistant strains long-term. In particular, the surveillance-based strategy appeared to accelerate the spread of drug resistance by applying a strong selective pressure on the bacterial population. Therefore, public health policy concerning drug-resistant gonorrhea merits reconsideration. This study also highlights how biological anthropology can offer new insight into public health problems by combining evolutionary and cultural approaches.



Ecological immunity and breast milk immunological profiles of two populations of mothers in Belém, Brazil

SR Fannin1, BA Piperata1, RE Kopec2, ACB de Azevedo3, CS do Nascimento3, RBT Oliveira3, CA da Paz3, JMF Pereira3, VCT da Silva3

1Department of Anthropology, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH; 2Department of Human Nutrition, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH; 3Department of Anthropology, Universidade Federal do Pará, Belém, Pará, Brazil

Breast milk is equipped with a host of immunological factors that play a critical role in developing the naïve infant immune system during the first years of life. Immune cells respond to the specific disease ecology that an individual is exposed to, which ultimately shapes variation in human milk immunity. While differences in milk immunity have been studied between rural and urban populations, few studies have looked at the potential for breast milk variation among populations with distinct local ecologies in the same urban context. This study aims to understand how local ecological contexts shape breast milk immunology among women living in the urban Amazonian city of Belém. Using socioeconomic status (SES) to infer the degree of pathogenicity in the lived environment, we performed ELISA assays to measure the concentrations of IgA, IgG, IgM, and lactoferrin in breast milk samples at ~4 weeks of maturity of 60 women, 23 of whom are classified as high SES and 37 as low SES. Among high SES women, concentrations of IgA, IgG, IgM, and lactoferrin were 335 ± 129 mg/L, 10.4 ± 5.19 mg/L, 4.72 ± 2.98 mg/L, and 4.11 ± 1.36 g/L, respectively. Among low SES women, concentrations measured 274 ± 278 mg/L, 8.57 ± 5.02 mg/L, 10.4 ± 8.04 mg/L, and 4.22 ± 1.46 g/L. Overall, there were no significant differences detected between the two groups except in mean IgM concentrations. Further research is required to understand if differences in local ecologies in Belém alter the immunological profiles of breastfeeding mothers.



Minoritized but not understood: a review of biocultural health outcomes and needs among Southwest Asian and North African (SWANA) adolescents in Canada and The United States

Alexa Chanté Fairclough- Dick1, Hani Al-Samawi2, Aya Ahmad3, Delaney JoLynn Glass1

1Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto – St George, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; 2Department of Biology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA; 3Department of Medicine, Rocky Vista University, Parker, Colorado, USA

Southwest Asian and North African (SWANA) youth are often situated uniquely as both racialized and invisible minorities in Canada and The United States (U.S.), following the War on Terror and anti-Arab, anti-Palestinian, and anti-Muslim racism. There has been shockingly little attention to characterizing and supporting the health and well-being of SWANA diaspora adolescents living in Canada and The U.S. We conducted a scoping review about physical, psychological, and biological health in SWANA adolescent populations. Inclusion criteria included adolescent and emerging adults ages 10-24 living in Canada or The U.S., Arab or SWANA identity, at least one physical, psychological, or biological outcome and scholarly literature published in English or Arabic any time before late 2024.

We identified 175 relevant studies using ResearchRabbit.ai, Google Scholar, and PubMed, but selected < 50% for inclusion in the review, highlighting the paucity of research on health and biological variation among SWANA adolescents in Canada and the U.S. Despite heterogeneity in the health outcomes reported across studies, many focused on acculturative stress, ethnic identity formation, and mental health. Very few studies examined physical growth, physical health, puberty, neuroendocrine or immunologic outcomes. Our review findings are supplemented by informal, anonymous conversations with members of community organizations working with SWANA youth who shared their perspectives on biological and health research priorities. We discuss potential future contributions of biocultural and human biological research approaches to advance a more holistic understanding of health variation among SWANA adolescent populations, drawing upon the strengths and survivance of SWANA youth.



Predictive risk factors for diagnosed diabetes and elevated blood glucose differ by sex in Vanuatu (South Pacific)

ME Gauck1, K Wander1, A Roome2, E Standard1, KN Dancause3, G Taleo4, L Tarivonda4, KM Olszowy5

1Department of Anthropology, Binghamton University (SUNY), Binghamton, New York, USA; 2Northeast Center for Occupational Health and Safety, Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown, New York, USA; 3Department of Physical Activity Sciences, University of Quebec at Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; 4Ministry of Health, Port Vila, Efate, Republic of Vanuatu; 5Department of Anthropology, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, New Mexico, USA

Transitions toward market-based economies introduce populations to new epidemiological and nutritional challenges such as Type 2 diabetes (T2D), a chronic disease characterized by uncontrolled blood glucose. T2D screening approaches involve identifying obesity via body mass index (BMI), though biological anthropologists and others have challenged this measurement’s utility. We evaluated twelve anthropometric measurements as alternative predictors of T2D (clinical diagnosis or random capillary blood glucose concentration >140 mg/dL) in Vanuatu, an island nation in the South Pacific currently undergoing a rapid economic and epidemiological transition. Anthropometry data collected from 368 adults included height/weight, estimates of abdominal adiposity (waist/hip circumferences), body composition (muscle/fat percentages), and skinfold measurements. Dominance analysis and estimates of model fit (AIC/BIC) identified important predictors for logistic regression models. Parallel analyses revealed unique patterns across sexes, which were obscured when considering participants together. For males, higher muscle mass (OR: 0.72, p = 0.029) and body fat percentages (OR: 0.82, p = 0.041) were inversely associated with diabetes risk. For females, height mattered more: higher waist-to-height ratios (OR: 1.07, p = 0.014) and shorter stature (OR for height in cm: 0.93, p = 0.147) increased risk. Females in this population may be more sensitive to nutritional strain during childhood, where individuals who experienced stunting were more susceptible to T2D as adults. Alternatively, males may be able to offset diabetes risk more effectively through aspects of their physiology and body composition, such as greater muscle proportions. These results support the growing movement away from using BMI to predict chronic disease risk.



Higher lipid levels after the transition to menopause for women in two forager-horticulturalist populations

Madeleine J Getz1, Jacob E Aronoff1, Carrie L Jenkins1, Suhail Ghafoor1, Jennifer Vazquez1, Nicole T Appel1, Margaret Gatz2, Egda D Bogen1, Daniel K Cummings3, Paul L Hooper3, Bret Beheim4, Kenneth Buetow1, Caleb E Finch2, Gregory S Thomas5, Jonathan Stieglitz6, Michael Gurven7, Hillard Kaplan3, Benjamin C Trumble1

1Center for Evolution and Medicine, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona; 2Leonard Davis School of Gerontology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California; 3Economic Science Institute, Chapman University, Orange, California; 4Department of Human Behavior, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany; 5Heart and Vascular Institute, MemorialCare Health System, Fountain Valley, California; 6Institute for Advanced Study, Toulouse School of Economics, Toulouse, France; 7Integrative Anthropological Sciences, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California

The reproductive lifespan affects health and longevity throughout the life course, and while significant focus has been devoted to the role of menarche, menopause remains understudied. Much of our existing data on menopause is derived from industrialized populations, where the risk of cardiovascular diseases increases progressively during the menopausal transition. We worked with the Tsimane, an Indigenous South American group in Bolivia with a physically active lifestyle, and the Moseten, genetically and culturally related horticulturalists experiencing greater market integration, to test the relationship between menopause status and lipid biomarkers (total cholesterol, triglycerides, apolipoprotein-B [ApoB], HDL, and LDL). Using linear mixed-effects models, in an all-age sample of women (15-94 years) where menopause was defined as age≥50 we found positive associations between menopausal status and most lipid levels. Menopause was associated with higher total cholesterol (b=7.089 mg/dL, p=0.001, n=2,667 observations from 1,161 women), triglycerides (b=14.276 mg/dL, p<0.001, n=2,671 observations from 1,161 women), and ApoB (b=0.214 mg/dL, p<0.001, n=858 observations from 560 women), controlling for age and population. We found no significant association between menopause status and HDL or LDL. These results support existing literature that documents distinct shifts in the lipid profile during and after the menopause transition in industrialized populations. Further, our results suggest lipid changes increase in the same direction as those observed in industrialized populations despite differential hormone exposure in industrialized environments, contributing valuable data on the global variation of menopause.



Assessing changes in fatigue after deep brain stimulation using qualitative and quantitative self-report measures

Linda M Gerber1, Kaiulani S Shulman2, Megan S Wright2,3, Joseph J Fins2,4, Nicholas D Schiff5

1Population Health Sciences, Weill Cornell Medical College, NY, NY; 2Division of Medical Ethics, Weill Cornell Medical College, NY, NY; 3College of Law, College of Medicine, Penn State University, University Park, PA; 4Solomon Center for Health, Law and Policy, Yale Law School, New Haven, CT; 5Feil Family Brain and Mind Research Institute, Weill Cornell Medical College, NY, NY

Fatigue is a common persistent impairment in individuals with moderate to severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Schiff et al (2023) recently conducted a feasibility study of deep brain stimulation (DBS) with the primary aim to assess improvements in executive control. Fatigue, as measured by the TBI-QOL Fatigue (TBI-QOL), was preselected as a secondary endpoint. The present study compares the before and after stimulation results of the TBI-QOL among five individuals participating in the DBS trial to fatigue assessed in two other types of self-reported data. Mean scores on the TBI-QOL were similar pre- and post-DBS (30 vs 26, respectively). On an additional self-reported questionnaire, the Rivermead Post-Concussive Symptom Questionnaire (RPQ), pre-DBS, three participants endorsed fatigue as a major problem and two endorsed fatigue as a minor problem. Post-DBS, only one participant endorsed fatigue as a major problem reported on RPQ, one endorsed fatigue as moderate problem and three indicated that fatigue was not a problem (mean score on one item decreased from 3.2 to 1.4). Narrative data also collected as part of a companion study (Fins et al, 2022, 2023) showed a strong effect: pre-DBS: three participants indicated that fatigue was a problem; post-DBS, all three of these participants specifically noted that fatigue had improved, while an additional participant noted improvement in fatigue despite not volunteering fatigue in their baseline interview. These findings broaden the understanding of symptom burden among individuals with chronic brain injuries and suggest the importance of incorporating narrative data to further inform self-report inventories.



Joint perspectives from community residents and research team members: The need for community-engaged work to address flooding-related environmental inequities in Cahokia Heights, IL

TE Gildner1,2, EK Mallott2,3, C Chaney2,3,4, KL Nemeth1, JA Beauregard1, A Samsonov5, C Masteller6, TJ Cepon-Robins7, ND Nelson8, K Jackson8, M Hill8, K Moehrs Gardner8, Y Lyles9

1Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 2Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity & Equity, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 3Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 4University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia, MO; 5Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, TX; 6Department of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 7Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado Colorado Springs, Colorado Springs, CO; 8Equity Legal Services, Fairview Heights, IL; 9Centreville Citizens for Change Council, Cahokia Heights, IL

The field of human biology relies on research techniques (e.g., minimally-invasive sample collection, point-of-care device use) that make it well positioned to develop research projects strongly rooted in community engagement. Establishing partnerships with community members is increasingly important in human biology research, but this long-term process is not always prioritized in other scientific fields. Here, in a presentation co-authored by researchers and community partners, we explore strategies for developing successful projects in collaboration with community members by highlighting an ongoing study on the impacts of persistent flooding in Cahokia Heights, IL (a predominantly Black, low-resource community). Government neglect of stormwater infrastructure has resulted in decades of household flood damage, unsafe drinking water, and sewage backups. In this presentation: (i) residents share their flooding experiences and discuss the formation of a community council to push for solutions; (ii) we present survey data highlighting factors that influence community member decisions to approve and participate in research studies; (iii) we discuss how community feedback has shaped study design and review key preliminary findings; and (iv) we explore future directions, including plans to strengthen community-researcher ties and use data to solicit assistance from government officials. Results from community-informed methods demonstrate widespread Helicobacter pylori infection (23-47% of participants annually, from 2022-2023), consistently high levels of intestinal inflammation (49-60% of participants, measured using fecal calprotectin), and an inverse relationship between gut microbiota diversity and reported flooding exposure. Cumulatively, these findings align with community experiences and provide evidence for the physical consequences of persistent flooding.



Analysis of stress and social support in LGBTQ family formation in the US South

Vaden Elaine Grigg1, Rebecca Cai Ting Wu1,2, Anneliese Marie Long1,2, Amanda Logan Thompson1,2

1Department of Anthropology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America; 2Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina

Social support is a buffer in mitigating stress surrounding family formation for childbearing individuals. Support from partners, family, and peers has been shown to reduce stress, anxiety, and depression during pregnancy. LGBTQ+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer+) individuals may experience a higher burden of stress surrounding a host of structural issues compared to their cisgender and heterosexual peers. These stressors have the potential to affect the health of the individual, which may lead to downstream effects, including decreased fertility and stress-based intergenerational effects on the child. The sources of stress and social support in LGBTQ+ family formation have been minimally explored, particularly within the Southern United States. To understand sources of stress and social support in LGBTQ+ family formation in this population, we conducted interviews with LGBTQ+ participants who lived in either North Carolina or Georgia and either had children, were expecting children, or had considered the family formation process (n = 13). Interviews were also conducted with practitioners working with LGBTQ+ individuals in family formation, including legal professionals, doulas, and acupuncturists (n = 6). Common themes in sources of stress included logistical/decision-making stress, financial constraint, and legal concerns. Sources of support included partners, other parents (whether LGBTQ+ or not), healthcare from non-biomedical sources, and online communities. These results provide insight into both presently relevant stressors in LGBTQ+ family formation and ways to mitigate these stressors.



The Connection Between Postpartum Depression and Milk Immune Specificity

Alli Harkenrider1,2, Natalie Mourou1,2, Masako Fujita1,2, Kathy Wander3,4

1Michigan State University, United States of America; 2Biomarker Laboratory for Anthropological Research, Michigan State University; 3Department of Anthropology Binghamton University (SUNY), Binghamton, New York; 4Laboratory for Anthropometry and Biomarkers, Binghamton University, Binghamton, New York

Postpartum depression (PPD), a psychological health issue, impacts 10-20% of mothers in America. Maternal depression can change the content of mother's milk, influencing milk immunity. Previous research has found that milk cortisol and immunoglobulin levels are increased in mothers when stressed. We hypothesize that postpartum depression would decrease milk immune specificity, which is its ability to differentially respond to varying bacteria. This study investigates the relationship between PPD and milk immune specificity. Mid-Michigan mothers were interviewed to complete the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, which was used to find mothers with PPD. Participants also donated a milk sample, which were incubated overnight in differing conditions - containing salmonella, bifidobacterium, or no bacteria. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) response (the ratio of IL-6 concentration after incubation to before incubation) was compared between these conditions. Based on preliminary data from a total of 21 mothers, those with PPD either had a positive IL-6 response to incubation with no bacteria and response to salmonella; Or there was no response to both conditions with Salmonella and no bacteria. On the other hand, mothers without PPD had little response to no bacteria, and positive response to bacteria. We find that the data produced aligns with our hypothesis that PPD distorts milk immune response; however more research is needed to verify these findings. Infant immune development depends on the quality of milk they receive; therefore, it is essential to understand the relationship between PPD and milk immune specificity



Ozempic messaging through social media: stigma, medicalization, and pharmaceutical usage

Teagan Louise Hayes

Florida State University, United States of America

Ozempic, a new drug originally created to treat diabetes, is frequently used for rapid weight loss. Fat stigma and the medicalization of fatness – particularly communicated through social media - may drive individuals toward Ozempic use. In this exploratory project, 100 TikTok videos (#Ozempic) were analyzed in February, 2024, and coded for themes that could influence Ozempic use, including side effects, doctor’s recommendations, and others. Results show that 27% of the videos showcased progress photos or successful weight loss due to the drug, highlighting not only the popularity of the drug but the success of users. Nine videos feature doctors discussing the drug, contributing to the medicalization of fatness. Twelve videos discuss the negative side effects and 10% discuss natural alternatives like supplements. The majority of videos in this sample discussed Ozempic positively, perhaps contributing to use of pharmaceutical solutions for weight loss in their audience, particularly those experiencing weight stigma. Importantly, Ozempic is currently easily accessible online or through medical spas based on BMI alone, but more recent evidence indicates risks of severe side effects of the drug. The intersection(s) of medicalization, stigma, and social media may therefore contribute to significant downstream health effects in Ozempic users. My findings highlight concerns with the rise of prescription weight loss drugs and the role of social media in their use. Future work based on the topic should explicitly test hypotheses derived from this content analysis of social media, including whether those experiencing stigma are more open to pharmaceutical weight loss messaging.



Life-history variation in hematocrit among children in Utila, Honduras

Carolyn R. Hodges-Simeon1, Jessica K. Hlay1, Madison A.C. Honig2, Nicole Merullo1, Izabel Rodriguez-James1, Brooke A. Rothamer1, Caroline B. Smith2, Aaron D. Blackwell2

1Boston University, United States of America; 2Washington State University, United States of America

Life history strategies are complex adaptations that coordinate somatic and developmental processes to optimize reproductive success. A fundamental concept in life history theory is phenotypic plasticity, which refers to an organism's ability to adaptively modify its traits in response to variability in its environment. Understanding physiological trade-offs in growing children is crucial for unraveling how and why early environments affect later health outcomes. One underutilized life-history measure is hematocrit, the percentage of red blood cells in blood. Trade-offs in hematocrit are acute; higher levels increase oxygen-carrying capacity and endurance, yet increase the long-term risk of cardiovascular problems. Using cross-sectional data from children ages 6–18 in Utila, Honduras, we assessed predictors of variability in hematocrit. Multiple regression was used to predict hematocrit variation from sex, age, strength, and height. We also assessed the impact of socioeconomic status and father absence. Results showed that hematocrit levels were significantly higher in males than females, but only after puberty, and among children with greater grip strength. Hematocrit levels were also signficantly higher among children living in a household with an unrelated male adult. These findings may reflect varying life history strategies; that is, growing bodies may prioritize benefits in the present over costs in the distant future when the long-term future is less certain.



Gender differences in nail cortisol, EBV antibody titers, and blood pressure among refugees in Serbia

Jelena Jankovic-Rankovic1, Rahul C Oka2,6, Jerrold S Meyer3, Geeta N Eick4, J. Josh Snodgrass4, Samuel S Urlacher5, Lee T Gettler2,6

1University of South Carolina, United States of America; 2University of Notre Dame, United States of America; 3University of Massachusetts-Amherst, United States of America; 4University of Oregon, United States of America; 5Baylor University, United States of America; 6Eck Institute for Global Health, University of Notre Dame, United States of America

Forced migration has impacted over 117 million people worldwide, with many experiencing hardships that result in toxic stress and trauma. As refugees seek safety across international borders, they face adverse conditions that may negatively impact their physiological and mental health. Gender plays a critical role in exposure to migration-related trauma, as women and men often face distinct physical and psychosocial stressors influencing their well-being. While variations in exposure to stressors may suggest differences in physiological stress responses, we know little about how these factors affect transient refugees’ psychobiology awaiting resettlement. Building from our prior work, we drew on fingernail cortisol, Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV), and blood pressure (BP) data collected from refugees (n = 202) in three Asylum Centers in Serbia between 2017 and 2020. We found that women exhibited lower cortisol (p=0.019) and higher EBV antibody titers (p=0.005) than men. We also found that men and those with shorter journeys had higher systolic BP (p=0.052), with no association observed for diastolic BP. Given that women were more likely to report journey-related trauma, we adjusted these models accordingly. However, this adjustment did not account for differences in EBV levels, cortisol, and systolic BP, although it did account for differences in diastolic BP between genders. While cross-sectional, our study aligns with the idea that women and men encounter and experience migration trauma differently, which may result in divergent physiological profiles and varying susceptibility to health problems. These findings underscore the need for gender-sensitive interventions addressing refugees’ unique needs during transitional migratory stages.



A meta-analysis of the DOHaD hypothesis in the context of market integration and food insecurity 

Krishangi Jasani, Makenna B Lenover Moyer, Laura Perez, Mary Katherine Shenk

Pennsylvania State University, United States of America

The Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) hypothesis proposes that harmful environmental exposures during critical periods of development may be associated with an increased risk of chronic and metabolic disorders. Numerous studies explore the rise in non-communicable diseases using this hypothesis, however, few comparatively examine the effects of food insecurity and nutrition transition. Similarly, studies primarily focus on variables affecting health outcomes in single populations, and a comprehensive analysis exploring whether the DOHaD hypothesis explains multiple health outcomes across populations in different socio-economic contexts has not been done. 

This meta-analysis will test the DOHaD hypothesis by examining four different health outcomes (obesity, hypertension, cardiovascular diseases, type 2 diabetes) observed in countries at varying income levels and differing stages of economic and nutrition transitions. A meta-analysis for each health outcome will be conducted, exploring major predictor variables including exposure to food insecurity, famine, nutritional deficiencies, and malnourishment across time periods including infancy, childhood, and adolescence. A baseline search on PubMed yielded 1407 papers for obesity, 124 for hypertension, 167 for type 2 diabetes and 220 for cardiovascular diseases (e.g. heart attack, stroke). Articles are being screened for levels of market integration, population age, control group, and age at exposure prior to data extraction and analysis. 

The study will improve our understanding of increasing non-communicable disease prevalence and inform whether DOHaD mechanisms explain these trends across populations with different socioeconomic contexts. Results will contribute to evolutionary medicine, and inform health policy and health interventions, especially in developing countries. 



Chronic pain and allostatic load among older adults in the United States

Dee Jolly, L. Zachary DuBois

University of Oregon, United States of America

Chronic pain has been linked to chronic stress, yet the pathways for how stress becomes embodied as chronic pain are not well understood. Current research suggests that this may occur through shared neural changes associated with both the cumulative ‘wear-and-tear’ of chronic stress (allostatic load), and increased pain perception. Using data from Wave 2 of the National Social Life, Health, and Aging Project (N=1,712), a nationally representative study of community-dwelling older adults (aged 61-91 years) in the United States, we aimed to test the hypothesized association between allostatic load and chronic pain through logistic and linear regression. Modeling other work investigating these relationships, we defined having chronic pain as having moderate, severe, extreme, or the worst pain imaginable over the past 4 weeks. To index allostatic load, we used quartile-based cutoffs to identify dysregulation for each system assessed via several biomarkers including heart rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, body mass index, waist-to-hip ratio, glycosylated hemoglobin, Epstein-Barr antibodies, C-reactive protein, and dehydroepiandrosterone. Analyses were adjusted for potential confounders including age, exercise level, smoking, depression, anxiety, and perceived stress. Allostatic load was associated with experiencing chronic pain (b=0.089, p=.038, 95% CI=0.005, 0.173). Among those reporting any level of pain, allostatic load was associated with pain level (b=0.055, p=.017, 95% CI=0.010, 0.101). These results support the hypothesized association between chronic pain and allostatic load and suggest that allostatic load may act as a mediating pathway through which lived experiences of chronic stress become embodied as chronic pain.



Making the case for using an inquiry-based approach that incorporates DNA-focused activities in introductory biological anthropology laboratory curricula

SL Johnston1, MK Knabb2, J Auld2, L Rieser-Danner3

1Department of Anthropology, West Chester University, West Chester, PA; 2Department of Biology, West Chester University, West Chester, PA; 3Department of Psychology, West Chester University, West Chester, PA

It has been well established that undergraduate college students retain misconceptions about evolution even after completing life science courses. Use of student-centered approaches in science courses, including problem-solving and inquiry-focused activities, has been shown to improve student learning generally and their understanding of evolution. Further, it has been suggested that for students to fully comprehend evolution, they need to understand that it is fundamentally about genetic change. Typical curricula in introductory biological anthropology labs involve examination of phenotypic phenomena, e.g., exercises focused on morphology and function; opportunities for students to link phenotypic with genetic variation in problem-solving, hands-on activities are not standard. From 2013-2016, faculty at West Chester University developed and implemented an inquiry-based laboratory curriculum for introductory biological anthropology that is still in use today in this course. A unique characteristic of this curriculum has been the incorporation of exercises that engage students directly with genetic evidence for evolution linked with phenotypic variation at several points in the semester (e.g., using DNA sequences to test morphology-based hypotheses about primate phylogeny). In this presentation, we summarize the evidence that students achieve greater improvement in their understanding of evolution in the context of an inquiry-based curriculum in biological anthropology than in standard lab curricula and provide data suggesting that an important component of this improvement may be the activities that encourage students to make connections between molecular and phenotypic variation.

Supported by an NSF TUES Award (DUE-1245013) and West Chester University.



Human development and somatic maturation among 9-11 year old children from 12 countries

PETER KATZMARZYK

Pennington Biomedical Research Center, United States of America

The present study investigated the relationship between somatic maturation and human development in children. The sample includes 7,332 children (54% girls) aged 9-11 y from 12 countries (Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Colombia, Finland, India, Kenya, Portugal, South Africa, United Kingdom, and United States). Maturity offset was computed from sex-specific regression equations using age and anthropometric characteristics to predict status of the child relative to their age at peak height velocity (aPHV). Sex-stratified mixed multilevel models with age as a covariate, accounting for the clustered data (children within schools within study sites), were used to examine the relationship between maturity offset and Human Development Index (HDI; analyzed as quartiles). The mean (SD) for age and maturity offset were 9.9 (0.6) y and -2.1 (1.0) y, respectively. HDI ranged from 0.509 for Kenya to 0.929 for Australia. Boys from higher HDI countries were closer to aPHV [mean (SE)]: Quartile 1, -3.2 (0.03) y; Quartile 2: -3.0 (0.03) y; Quartile 3: -2.8 (0.02) y; and Quartile 4: -2.8 (0.02) y; p for trend <0.0001. Girls from higher HDI countries were also closer to aPHV: Quartile 1, -1.6 (0.03) y; Quartile 2: -1.6 (0.03) y; Quartile 3: -1.3 (0.02) y; and Quartile 4: -1.3 (0.02) y; p for trend <0.0001. A similar association was observed using partial correlations between HDI and maturity offset, adjusting for age, which were 0.28 in boys and 0.20 in girls. In conclusion, children from countries with higher levels of human development were more advanced in terms of somatic maturation.



Impacts of pregnancy planning on birth outcomes vary among racialized groups in the US

Monica Keith1,2, Taylor Harman1, Melanie Martin2,3

1Department of Anthropology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN; 2Center for Studies in Demography and Ecology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA; 3Department of Anthropology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA

Unplanned or unintended pregnancy has been associated with increased risk of adverse outcomes such as preterm birth and postpartum depression. Major US and global public health initiatives aim to decrease rates of unintended pregnancies in order to reduce maternal and infant health disparities, meanwhile, the socioecology of reproductive behaviors and pregnancy planning varies significantly across demographic groups.

We analyzed observational cohort data collected between 2010-2013 from a nationally diverse sample of nulliparous women (n=9,271) to assess the impacts of pregnancy planning on birth outcomes in the US. Among this cohort intending to carry nulliparous pregnancies to term, non-Hispanic white women were 2.9 times more likely than non-Hispanic Black mothers-to-be and 1.6 times more likely than Hispanic women to have planned their pregnancies. Rates of adverse birth outcomes were highest among Black women (12.7% versus 8.1% in white women and 8.2% in Hispanic women), as were rates of postpartum complications (6.8% in Black women, 4.7% in white women, and 6.7% in Hispanic women).

We ran generalized linear models to associate planned versus unplanned pregnancy with adverse birth outcomes (including preterm birth and fetal loss), postpartum complications, and surveyed breastfeeding plans, controlling for maternal age and BMI. Models stratified by racialized groups show that pregnancy planning was predictive of these outcomes only among non-Hispanic white women, despite statistical power >0.85 across all groups. These results indicate that reproductive ecology varies among racialized groups in the US, and generalized associations may not explain disparities among groups most likely to experience adverse outcomes.



Exploring the Immunological Mechanisms of Oral Immunotherapy in Food Allergy Desensitization

Kaily Khaloyan

University of California, Berkeley

Exploring the immunological mechanisms of oral immunotherapy in food allergy desensitization

Food allergies represent a growing public health crisis, with severe reactions like anaphylaxis putting the lives of affected individuals at constant risk. Conventional approaches to managing food allergies, such as allergen avoidance and emergency interventions, focus on preventing reactions but do not address the root immunological causes. Oral immunotherapy (OIT) has emerged as a promising therapeutic alternative, aiming to desensitize individuals by introducing gradual, controlled doses of allergens. This research seeks to explore the molecular and cellular pathways through which OIT induces desensitization, specifically focusing on how OIT modulates IgE-mediated immune responses and promotes long-term immune tolerance by enhancing the activity of regulatory T cells. To achieve this, an extensive review of the current literature will be conducted alongside survey data from individuals undergoing or who have completed OIT treatment. Clinical insights from Dr. Inderpal Randhawa, a physician renowned for using oral desensitization, will be integrated to link theoretical mechanisms with practical, real-world clinical experiences. By deepening the understanding of OIT’s mechanisms, this research aims to contribute to the development of safer and more effective therapies for food allergy desensitization.

K Khaloyan

Department of Nutritional Science, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California



The Students’ Gambit: Canadian university students’ perceived vulnerability to disease and situational COVID-19 risk in the transition back to campus

Erica Kilius1,2, Leela McKinnon2, Ming Fei Li2, David R. Samson3

1University of Northern British Columbia, Prince George BC, Canada; 2University of Toronto, Toronto ON, Canada; 3University of Toronto Mississauga, Mississauga ON, Canada

Risk perception has been well studied during the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly in models of behavior that assess engagement with public health recommendations. However, it is critical to understand how individuals situationally assess their risk, and what demographic and health factors influence personal risk assessments. Using a mixed-methods approach, we conducted an online survey with University of Toronto students from August - September of 2021 (n = 126), and again from June - July 2022 (n = 84), assessing the impact of repeated university closures on students’ health. Semi-structured interviews were also conducted across both years of data collection (n = 13 and n = 8, respectively). Survey questions related to students’ perceived vulnerability to disease (PVD) and a situational risk assessment of eleven typical campus scenarios. Regression analyses demonstrated that increased PVD was associated with older age and Big Five personality traits, with extroversion and conscientiousness predicting higher germ aversion scores. Poorer self-rated mental and physical health predicted higher perceived infectability but not germ aversion. Furthermore, increased PVD was associated with assessing typical campus scenarios as unsafe. Thematic analysis of interview and free-survey responses found changing risk perceptions across time, with an increased focus on a personal assessment of risk in the second year, with increased preference for hybrid format of classes. Evolutionary perspectives on risk decision making, such as the Behavioral Immune System, can assist in contextualizing these findings. These results are critical for tailoring university protocols during infectious disease outbreaks, to increase inclusion of diverse student needs.



Measurement of leptin, a marker of energy status and appetite regulation, in dried blood spots using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay

Elizabeth Y. Kim1, Luna S. Orozco2, Emma G. Shoemaker2, Hannah N. Cantrell3, Josh J. Snodgrass3,4, Melissa A. Liebert6, Felicia C. Madimenos5, Jeffrey Gassen7, Tomasz J. Nowak10, Sally P. Weaver8, Erich J. Baker9, Larry S. Sugiyama3, Michael P. Muehlenbein10, Samuel S. Urlacher10

1Department of Biology, Baylor University, Waco, TX; 2Human Evolutionary Biology and Health Lab, Baylor University, Waco, TX; 3Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR; 4Global Station for Indigenous Studies & Cultural Diversity, Hokkaido University, Japan; 5Department of Anthropology, Queens College (CUNY), Flushing, NY; 6Department of Anthropology, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ; 7Department of Psychiatry, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA; 8Waco Family Medicine, Waco, TX; 9Department of Computer Science, Belmont University, Nashville, TN; 10Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, TX

Understanding how children regulate energy is crucial for advancing knowledge on human biological variation, with important implications for metabolism, evolution, and health. Leptin, a hormone secreted by adipocytes, is a key biomarker of energy status and appetite regulation, signaling energy stores to the brain to adjust food intake. Problematically, leptin research has been overwhelmingly limited to venipuncture sampling, restricting its use in vulnerable populations, including children and Indigenous groups, and preventing understanding of global variation. Here, we validated a commercial ELISA kit (R&D Systems, QK398) for measuring leptin in finger-prick dried blood spot (DBS) samples using the ‘Waco100’ matched DBS:serum sample set (N = 40), following a validation with a now-unavailable kit. Leptin was reliably detected in DBS (mean = 312.2±251.0 pg/mL), with a strong linear relationship to serum values (r² = 0.97; Passing-Bablok regression). Validation tests confirmed dilutionary linearity (103.2±4.2% recovery), spike and recovery (102.3±4.1% recovery), and analyte temperature stability (all effects p > 0.05). These results indicate excellent reliability for measuring leptin in DBS. To initially explore variation in children’s energy regulation, we measured leptin in DBS from 23 Indigenous Ecuadorian Shuar children (ages 3-12 years). Shuar children leptin levels appear to be lower than industrialized references, with a mean of 31.3±26.6 pg/mL in DBS (equivalent to 1,093.4±936.3 pg/mL in serum). Additionally, leptin was positively associated with BMI (ß = 2.27, p < 0.01) and weight-for-age (ß = 1.76, p < 0.01). These findings support measurement of leptin in DBS for studying childhood energetics and appetite regulation globally.



Hunter-gatherers in transition: estimations of diet composition and food security among Hadzabe hunter-gatherers

Miriam C Kopels, Alyssa N Crittenden

University of Nevada, Las Vegas, United States of America

Hadzabe foragers of Tanzania are currently experiencing shifts in their ecological, nutritional, and socio-political landscapes. These factors have led to alterations in their identity, patterns of subsistence, and degree of market integration. Despite research interest, few data are available to demonstrate how these changes impact food security and overall nutrition. We present preliminary findings on food security in Hadzabe communities alongside 24-hour dietary recall data to explore shifts in dietary composition. Among an adult sample (n=123), average caloric consumption was 1,595 kcal/day. Daily kcal consumption significantly decreased from 2015 to 2019 (U=11.57, p=0.001) - largely due to a drop in wild food consumption (U=5.3, p=0.021), specifically berries (U=8.96, p=0.003) and tubers (U=6.53, p=0.011). These changes are likely impacting women asymmetrically, given that they collect and eat significantly more berries (τ = 2.31, p=0.021), and less honey (τ = -4.56, p<0.001) - a resource that remained stable from 2015-2019. Measuring food insecurity using validated surveys, we found that 79.5% of participants reported at least 1 experience of severe food insecurity during 2019, with an average score of 3.26 (scale 0-8). This suggests that food insecurity is increasing alongside decreased access to wild foods. These data act to dispel the myth that foragers remain immune to expanding global markets, while also contextualizing contemporary variation in subsistence regimes and highlighting resiliency in the face of change.



Evidence that male and female body composition responds equally to seasonal food deprivation, but women are advantaged under starvation

KAREN L KRAMER, Joseph Hackman

University of Utah, United States of America

Sex differences in human body composition are often framed as an evolutionary response to resource constraints. Both seasonal fluctuations and extreme famine events can induce shortfalls in food availability, and have been at the center of debates over which favored sexual dimorphism in body composition. While this debate has been theoretically formulated, it lacks empirical testing. Here we analyze body composition in three groups of hunter-gatherers and horticulturalists who are genetically related but experience considerable differences in food availability and energy stress. Analyses show that differences in male and female body composition are proportional across this food gradient except under synthetic starvation conditions. When exposed to starvation, women loose substantial fat mass, yet retain sufficient levels to maintain their lean mass. Men, however, loose both significant fat and lean mass. The greater resilience of women to pronounced deprivation may be an unintended consequence of an ancient dimorphism in body fat or selected more recently, following domestication, as famine became a regular feature of the human subsistence niche. Findings imply that behavioral strategies that emerged during human evolution were adequate to offset debilitating lean mass losses during seasonal food shortages, however, may not have been protective for men during starvation events.



Variability in inflammatory regulation patterns in young adults across repeated measures using a minimally invasive cell culture system

Keegan C Krause1, Thomas W McDade1,2, Alistair Keggen3,4, Aaron A Miller1, Madeline Harrington4,5, Jacob E Cheadle3,4, Aprile D Benner4,6, Bridget J Goosby3,4

1Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University; 2Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University; 3Department of Sociology, University of Texas at Austin; 4Population Research Center, University of Texas at Austin; 5Department of Applied Psychology in Education and Research Methodology, Indiana University; 6Department of Human Development and Family Studies, University of Texas at Austin

Chronic hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) activation can affect the regulation of inflammation, potentially reducing glucocorticoid sensitivity and promoting the development of a pro-inflammatory phenotype. Epidemiological studies often rely on static baseline measures of circulating inflammatory biomarkers, whereas minimally invasive ex-vivo cell culture protocols can quantify dynamic inflammatory regulation by measuring cytokine responses to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) challenges and subsequent regulatory response to glucocorticoids (GCs) in small volumes of whole blood. These ex-vivo cell culture systems are potentially cost-effective approaches for assessing pro-inflammatory phenotype development and GC sensitivity in community-based settings, however it remains unclear whether observed inflammatory regulation patterns captured by these systems indicate trait or state effects and whether inflammatory regulation measurements are associated with circadian timing. In this study we compare pro-inflammatory cytokine responses in an ex-vivo LPS-GC cell culture system across two time points and between morning and afternoon blood collections among participants in Project TAURUS (Targeting And Understanding Racism Under the Skin), a pilot study of young adults of color residing in Austin, TX (ages 18-26, 75% female, n=154). Paired t-tests will be used to compare IL-6, IL-1β, and TNFα concentrations across four stimulated culture conditions completed two weeks apart and between participants completing morning versus afternoon blood draws. These results will contribute new methodological considerations of observation stability and timing in measurements of inflammation regulation in community settings.



Qualitative interviews exploring the benefits of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in a sample of adults diagnosed with ADHD

Amanda E Kunkle1, Dan TA Eisenberg1,2,3

1Department of Anthropology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA; 2Center for Studies of Demography and Ecology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA; 3Department of Biology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA

Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) affects around 10% of US children and 4.4% of US adults, and is diagnosed when persistent patterns of inattention, hyperactivity, and/or impulsivity are observed to impact daily functioning. Given the high prevalence of ADHD, an evolutionary mismatch framework suggests that ADHD behaviors were previously beneficial and, thus, may still be beneficial in certain contexts. Here, we explore common areas of strength self-identified by ADHD-diagnosed adults.

Semi-structured interviews and surveys were used to collect data on participant’s experiences at home, at work, and in other aspects of daily life. The benefits of ADHD were emphasized during interviews. Interviews were transcribed for thematic analysis. Preliminary findings from seven individuals who have been interviewed so far are included here. 13 more interviews are planned.

Six of seven participants regarded their ability to problem solve in creative ways (“out-of-the-box” thinking) as a key strength derived from their ADHD. Five participants described finding enjoyment in and feeling passionate about jobs and hobbies with hands-on components, while four participants noted being drawn to dynamic environments with varied tasks. Two participants stated that the ability to “hyperfocus,” which they attributed to their ADHD, was highly beneficial. Two participants who regularly participate in physically challenging sports felt that their ADHD contributed positively to their performance by allowing them to process information quickly and multitask effectively. Planned future research building on these data will investigate whether these self-identified strengths are more common in those with ADHD than those without ADHD.



Dam-induced displacement and disruption are associated with cortisol concentration and patterns of diurnal variation

Cassie C Lee1, Aaron A Miller1, Thomas W McDade1, Patrick M Owuor2

1Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL; 2Department of Anthropology, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI

The development of hydroelectric dams has been integral to economic development in low- and middle-income countries. For example, the Thwake Multipurpose Dam in Makueni, Kenya, is expected to reduce water insecurity and enhance economic development upon completion. However, the biosocial implications of these infrastructure projects, particularly among women and children, are poorly understood. As a measure of the stress related effects, this study examines the cortisol concentrations and diurnal variation of women who were either resettled by, live downstream of, or live upstream of the Thwake Multipurpose Dam development project. Salivary cortisol (1205 samples corresponding to 411 participants) was measured in the evening, upon waking, and 30-minutes after waking in 2019. After applying exclusion criteria to control for sample quality, collection timing, outliers, and survey data, 221 participants had at least one measure of cortisol concentration. Mean participant age was 37.1 years (SD 15.7), the mean on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale was 35.2 (SD 9.40), the mean Minimum Dietary Diversity for Women was 5.72 (SD 2.01), and the mean wealth index was 0.070 (SD 0.901). In unadjusted linear regression, log-transformed evening cortisol concentration and evening-waking diurnal difference were significantly associated with displacement status. In adjusted linear regression, log-transformed evening cortisol concentration was significantly associated with displacement status. These results suggest that both displaced and downstream communities experience stress related hormonal changes from dam-induced disruption. Greater attention to downstream communities is necessary for more comprehensive mitigation measures to reduce the health impacts of hydroelectric dam development.



Intestinal health, parasite infection, & WASH access among people experiencing houselessness in the USA

Abiel K Locke1, Mackenzie Ní Flainn1, Allissa L Van Steenis1,2, Tara J Cepon-Robins3, Lesley Jo Weaver4, J Josh Snodgrass1,5

1Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, United States of America; 2Center for Translational Neuroscience, University of Oregon, United States of America; 3Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado Colorado Springs, United States of America; 4Department of Global Studies, University of Oregon, United States of America; 5Global Station for Indigenous Studies and Cultural Diversity, Hokkaido University, Japan

Water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) are global health priorities, but in the United States few studies have examined the intersection of intestinal health, parasite infection, the microbiome, and clean water access. No study has explored these phenomena with people experiencing houselessness (PEH). Given the sensitive and often stigmatizing nature of WASH issues and the methods used to assess the health impacts thereof (e.g., fecal samples), researchers examining these topics must tread carefully to avoid further marginalizing groups for whom WASH access is a challenge. Toward that end, we used a community-based participatory research (CBPR) approach to design a pilot project under a larger housing insecurity and health study that examined WASH and its health consequences among PEH. Initial results from a focus group with five participants showed consistent WASH access challenges and experience with unfiltered water causing serious illness and stress. Water sources included the local river for multiple uses, including drinking and bathing. In the next several months we will be collecting additional interview data and beginning a pilot study that involves analysis of parasite infection, intestinal inflammation, and microbiome composition. These preliminary discussions suggest that despite no historical studies examining parasite infections and intestinal health among this population in the US, it is reasonable to expect novel findings given prevalent WASH accessibility challenges. The CBPR methodology will allow us to work in collaboration with participants and the community towards interventions, intestinal healthcare access, open lines of bidirectional communication for feedback, and overall health of the community.



Perspectives on the Rising Cost of Parenthood: Exploring Childbearing Goals, Barriers, and Facilitators among Nulliparous Individuals in North Carolina

Anneliese Long, Karen B Guzzo, Morgan K Hoke, Rebecca C Wu, Amanda L Thompson

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America

Intersectional inequalities in the United States have far and wide-reaching consequences, including on paths to parenthood. Individuals from lower socioeconomic backgrounds may experience more barriers to becoming parents. Poorer mental health outcomes and sustained stress from higher levels of uncertainty and economic instability may impose an effect on biological function, especially for those who experience the highest levels of discordance between their fertility goals and individual agency. Our present analysis seeks to explore and characterize the relationships between sociodemographic characteristics and an individual's fertility goals, as well as identify key barriers and facilitators to meeting fertility goals. To this end, we utilize data from the Fertility Expectations, Experiences & Life Intentions (FEEL) Study. Data collection took place between July 2024 and October 2024, and the study population included individuals residing in the state of North Carolina with female reproductive anatomy who were between the ages of 25 and 35 years old. Participants were required to be without any current children or dependents. The data collected included self-administered online questionnaires (N=189) and in-depth semi-structured interviews (N=31). Using questionnaire data, we examine the relationships between participant characteristics, including measures of social status, age, race/ethnicity, sexual orientation, psychosocial stress, education level, relationship status, and the desire for children. Our study results suggest that there are differences in fertility goals between individuals based on social characteristics. This work is grounded in a reproductive justice framework and amplifies the need to address ongoing inequalities in the United States for the betterment of its population.



Comparing urban and rural prenatal care accessibility and determinants in North Carolina

Julia Ann Mackessy1,2, Amanda Logan Thompson1,2,3

1Department of Anthropology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina; 2Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina; 3Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina

Previous research has shown that mothers and infants in rural parts of the United States are at greater risk for lack of access to care and poorer maternal and infant health outcomes compared to urban parts of the country. In North Carolina, there has been an increase in the closure of labor and delivery units over the past ten years especially in rural areas of the state. However, little is known about how these closures have affected trends in prenatal care access in North Carolina. This exploratory secondary analysis examines the trends and factors in prenatal care visits over time in rural versus urban North Carolina counties using data from the 2006-2020 Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS) dataset. Initial analyses show an increasing delay in the timing of first prenatal visits between 2006 and 2019 in both rural and urban counties, though differences between urban and rural counties are not significant (p-value = 0.57). Additionally, findings from this analysis suggest that prenatal care visits are delayed in both urban and rural parts of North Carolina due to factors such as having no prenatal appointments available, not having insurance for early prenatal care, and not having Medicaid coverage. Examining these relationships over time is important to understanding potential inequalities in maternal and infant health outcomes in rural parts of North Carolina.



Social experiences and political dynamics of Hepatitis B among Chinese Americans living in the San Francisco-Bay Area: an ethnographic study

Mo Mao, Andrew Wooyoung Kim

Department of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, United States

Hepatitis B is a viral disease transmitted largely through bodily fluids and can result in liver failure, liver cirrhosis, and cancer. A majority of people with hepatitis B are unaware of their infection status, and approximately 50-70% of adults with acute hepatitis B are asymptomatic. Hepatitis B is known to disproportionately affect Asian Americans, and although the vaccine has been commercially available in the United States since 1982, it is estimated that Asian/Pacific Islander Americans (APIA) are 10 times more likely to die of hepatitis B compared to White Americans. While researchers have sought to understand hepatitis B risk among immigrant and minority populations, few studies have compared the perspectives of hepatitis B among Asian American adults across multiple stakeholders: patients, providers, and advocates. This study aimed to examine the political dynamics and social experiences of Chinese Americans living with chronic hepatitis B infection in the San Francisco-Bay Area. Through ethnographic research, our results showed that Chinese American patients carefully monitored their medical conditions, expressed deep trust towards their providers, and sought to be seen as “typical” or “normal” members of society. Their desires for normalcy were linked to a long history of stigma against Chinese American adults, who were viewed as pathologized, diseased, and a group needing extra support. Perceived limitations in health advocacy efforts were driven by their inability to overcome language barriers, limited understanding of patient’s cultural perspectives, and a lack of supportive government policies, attention, and funding for minority health problems, including hepatitis B.



Rest-activity patterns and sleep timing in urban and rural Wixárika communities in Jalisco, Mexico

Leela McKinnon1,2, Eric C Shattuck1,3,4, Igor Ramos Herrera5, René Crocker Sagastume5, Quetzabel de la Cruz5, Pari Temai González Hernández5, Addy Villaseñor5, Yara Martin5, Paola Pérez5, Sofia Muñoz5, Thankam Sunil6, David Samson1,2

1Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto Mississauga; 2Centre for Urban Environments, University of Toronto Mississauga; 3Department of Anthropology, Florida State University; 4Native American and Indigenous Studies Center, Florida State University; 5Departamento de Salud Pública, Centro Universitario de Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad de Guadalajara; 6Department of Public Health, University of Tennessee Knoxville

Circadian rhythms form the biological basis for numerous physiological and behavioral processes, including sleep patterns. While regulated by the light-dark cycle, other stimuli including temperature and work hours also influence them. Although sleep's importance for health is well known, the role of rest-activity patterns—an expression of circadian rhythm—is less understood. Here, we present rest-activity data from two Indigenous Wixárika samples in Mexico: one from a rural town in northern Jalisco, and the other from communities of migrants in the Guadalajara Metropolitan Area. We hypothesized that urban environments disrupt rest-activity rhythms, predicting that the urban migrants would have less stable, more variable rest-activity patterns and later sleep timing than those living in the rural community. We generated rest-activity data (relative amplitude (RA), interdaily stability (IS), and intradaily variability (IV)) from 124 participants (mean age=33.37 years, 67.74% women) using wrist-worn accelerometers. Using linear regression analyses, we compared RA, IS, and IV by location, controlling for occupation, age, and gender. We found no difference between groups in RA (estimate=−0.003, p=0.907), IS (estimate=-0.006, p=0.803), or IV (estimate=0.003, p=0.931). Women have significantly higher IS than men (estimate=0.078, p<0.001), and those working as artisans have significantly lower IV than non-artisans (estimate=-0.134, p=0.002). We found that the average midpoint of sleep—indicating sleep timing—is significantly later in the urban compared to the rural group (estimate=49.17, p<0.001). These results indicate that factors associated with urban living environments may drive later sleep timing, but that social factors may be more important in influencing circadian rhythms.



Subsistence strategies as mediators of undernutrition through severe drought among Daasanach pastoralists in northern Kenya, 2019-2024

Natalie Meriwether1, Hannah Jacobson2, Anna Tavormina9, Kedir Teji Roba1, Amanda McGrosky3, Suha Arshad4, Nicole Bobbie1, Kiera Papa1, Gabriella Berger1, Natalie Kitts1, Grace Khosi7, Srishti Sadhir3, Emmanuel Ndiema7, Matthew Douglass8, Rosemary Nzunza5, David Braun6, Herman Pontzer3,9, Asher Rosinger1,10

1Department of Biobehavioral Health, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA; 2Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA; 3Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA; 4Department of Anthropology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA; 5Center for Virus Research, Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), Nairobi, Kenya; 6Center for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology, Department of Anthropology, The George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA; 7Department of Earth Sciences, National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya; 8University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE, USA; 9Global Health Institute, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA; 10Department of Anthropology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA

Extreme climatic events have devastating effects on malnutrition, yet little is known about how different subsistence strategies mediate their effects. The historic 2020-2023 Greater Horn of Africa Drought led to widespread food insecurity and undernutrition across eastern Africa. We sought to understand how diverse subsistence strategies were associated with undernutrition among Daasanach pastoralists using data from the Daasanach Human Biology Project, collected from June 2019 (pre-drought) to 2022 and 2023 (peak and end of drought) to July 2024 (a year post-drought). Anthropometric data for adults ≥ 18 excluding pregnant women (n = 959, N = 486) indicated that most adults were underweight, with an average BMI range from 17.90-18.23 for men and 18.05-18.53 for women across years. Subsistence strategies of market food purchases and fish, meat, and milk consumption showed differing usage trends, with the highest fish and milk consumption in 2024, while reliance on market purchases was highest and meat consumption was lowest in 2022. We estimated panel random effects linear regression models to analyze the impact of these dietary subsistence strategies on BMI and adiposity via sum of four skinfolds (SUM4), controlling for age, sex, and year fixed effects. Higher meat consumption was associated with slightly higher BMI (B = 0.053; SE = 0.19; p = 0.024) and adiposity (SUM4) (B = 0.54 mm; SE = 0.02; p = 0.005), while fish, milk consumption, and market purchases were not associated with indicators of undernutrition. This highlights the importance of traditional and emergent subsistence strategies for nutritional stability among pastoralists.



A review of the Biocultural Approach in Canadian Medical Anthropology

Maha Mian, Lianne Tripp

Trent University, Canada

The biocultural anthropological approach is a term that has seen an increase in usage with regards to academic job postings and medical anthropology courses in Canada.

The extent to which Canadian biological medical anthropologists embrace a biocultural approach in their research is unknown. Further, the precise definition of the biocultural approach is not clearly defined.

For this presentation we used a Google search of faculty university biographies to identify:

1. Medical anthropologists who are faculty members at a public post-secondary institution in Canada

2. Medical anthropologist who self-identify as using biocultural methods

Out of the identified biological medical anthropologists, we explore the frequency of the usage of the biocultural approach in their research within the last 10 years.

Our preliminary findings suggest that in departments with at least one medical anthropologist (total anthropology faculty of 546), 10.2% identify as medical anthropologists. Only 3.5% of anthropology faculty self-identified as a biological medical anthropologist. Of all the medical anthropologists in Canada, only 30.43% identify as biological medical anthropologists.

The common research areas: include disease, global and public health, nutrition and diet, and maternal and infant health. Less common areas of interest are mental health, trauma and surgery, and disability studies.

Achieving a precise percentage as to who are medical anthropologists proved to be a challenge. We propose an expansive definition of the biocultural approach within medical anthropology, which includes the physical and social environments. Future research will require interviews with medical anthropologists to elucidate their perspectives on what is biological medical anthropology.



Iron deficiency, measured by soluble transferrin receptor and ferritin, is associated with reported infertility in U.S. women who have never been pregnant

Elizabeth Miller

University of South Florida, United States of America

Despite women’s physiological need for large amounts of iron during pregnancy, there are only a few studies that have studied the relationship between iron status and fecundity/fertility. Women with both low and high iron biomarkers have been reported to experience low fertility or fecundity, depending on population context and biomarker choice. This study seeks to test two different biomarkers of iron deficiency, soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR) and ferritin, and their relationship to self-reported infertility in 483 reproductive-aged (18-49 years old) women who have never been pregnant in the NHANES 2015-2018 dataset. I predicted that greater iron deficiency, measured by higher sTfR and lower ferritin, would be associated with greater odds of reporting infertility. Ferritin and sTfR were log-transformed prior to analysis. PROC SURVEYLOGISTIC was used, with appropriate weights, to analyze odds ratio of self-reported infertility. Controlling for age, race/ethnicity, income/poverty ratio, BMI, and log C-reactive protein, higher sTfR was significantly associated with higher odds of reported infertilty (OR = 3.47, p = 0.01). Lower ferritin was marginally associated with higher odds of infertility (OR = 1.68, p = 0.08). In contrast to previous studies, iron deficiency is associated with greater likelihood of infertility in U.S. women who have not been pregnant. In this study, sTfR showed a stronger relationship than ferritin. This may be due to ferritin’s role as an acute phase reactant during inflammation, a known risk factor for infertility in this population. Choice of biomarker may impact research findings and ultimately clinical decision-making for iron deficient women.



Cumulative lifetime changes in urbanicity and the pace of biological aging: a test using epigenetic clocks in metropolitan Cebu, Philippines

Silvio Ernesto Mirabal Torres1, Calen P. Ryan2, Nanette R. Lee3, Delia B. Carba3, Julia L. MacIsaac4, David T. S. Lin4, Parmida Atashzay4, Michael S. Kobor4,5,6,7, Christopher W. Kuzawa1

1Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts; 2Robert N. Butler Columbia Aging Center, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, New York; 3USC-Office of Population Studies Foundation, University of San Carlos, Talamban, Cebu City, Philippines; 4BC Children’s Hospital Research Institute, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; 5Child and Brain Development Program, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; 6Department of Medical Genetics, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada; 7Centre for Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

In rapidly urbanizing areas across the globe, populations from rural areas move to urban cores, pursuing expanded opportunities in life. These moves introduce novel changes in exposures and lifestyle that influence health through multiple pathways, including changes in diet, activity levels, and daily stress exposure. We assessed the impacts of lifetime transitions in neighborhood urbanicity on health using data from the Cebu Longitudinal Health and Nutrition Survey (CLHNS), a one-year birth cohort study established in 1983-1984. We tallied the number of residential moves participants experienced and calculated the cumulative change in urbanicity, as revealed in a composite urbanicity scale reflecting population size, density, access to communications, transportation, educational facilities, health services, and markets in the residential areas. Health was indexed using a suite of epigenetic clocks measured in whole blood (Illumina EPIC v.1 array) collected at 20-22 years of age. DNA methylation data were used to calculate Horvath, Hannum, PhenoAge, GrimAge, telomere length, and DunedinPACE clocks. Regression models adjusting to relevant control variables revealed significant gender differences in urbanicity changes, with females (M=1.25, SD=7.58) experiencing greater changes compared to males (M=0.45, SD=7.98) [t(1534.6) = -2.03, p = 0.043]. Among females, significant correlations were observed between urbanicity changes and biological aging, including positive correlations (reflecting faster aging) with PCHorvath1 (r=0.096, p=0.009), PCHorvath2 (r=0.094, p=0.010), PCPhenoAge (r=0.119, p=0.001), and PCGrimAge (r=0.098, p=0.007), and an inverse correlation (faster aging) with PCDNAmTL (r=-0.080, p=0.029). This study points to impacts of lifetime change in urbanicity that manifest in marked, gender-specific patterns, with females most impacted.



Attitudes and awareness of intestinal parasites: A qualitative pilot study among the indigenous Qom/Toba in northern Argentina

Paula A Monguí1, Lisandra Mancilla2,3, Mirtha Perez2,4, Nestor N Ocampo3, María L Zonta5, Graciela T Navone5, Claudia Valeggia1

1Department of Anthropology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA; 2Chaco Area Reproductive Ecology Program, Formosa, Argentina; 3Community of Namqom, Formosa province, Argentina; 4Community of Vaca Perdida, Formosa province, Argentina; 5CEPAVE-CONICET, Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Argentina

Intestinal parasitic infections (IPIs) remain a long-standing problem still affecting indigenous peoples worldwide. Physical environment characteristics, sociocultural practices and economic conditions can either contribute to the persistence or act as barriers of parasite transmission. Thus, attitudes and perceptions among indigenous peoples are an important step to successfully address IPIs and promote prevention. In this pilot study we focused on two different Qom/Toba communities in Formosa, northern Argentina: Namqom (a peri-urban neighborhood near the province capital), and Vaca Perdida (a rural community in the West of the province). We were interested in comparing these two sites to evaluate possible differences in their attitudes and knowledge regarding intestinal parasites, and their access to Western health care offered at primary level local health centers. Here, we report results from a qualitative data analysis of n = 27 interviews and n = 54 questionnaires. In both communities, there was limited recognition of the presence, transmission, health impact and prevention of parasites. We found similar narratives about intestinal parasites, and no clear indication of traditional medicine practices to address parasite symptoms between locations. Site-specific factors, such as access to clean water, toilet conditions, hand hygiene, and waste management, likely played a role in either facilitating or reducing parasite transmission. Health care workers reported a high incidence of parasitic infections based on patients' symptoms but noted challenges in ensuring compliance with Western medical treatments. As a result, a following study will assess the presence and diversity of intestinal parasites through fecal sample analysis.



What explains variation in childhood blood pressure? An exploration of life history variables affecting blood pressure in Utila, Honduras

Nicole Merullo1, Aaron D Blackwell2, Gabrielle N Busi1, Jessica K Hlay1, Madison AC Hönig2, Izabel Rodríguez-James1, Brooke A Rothamer1, Caroline B Smith2, Carolyn R Hodges-Simeon1

1Boston University, United States of America; 2Washington State University, United States of America

Blood pressure (BP) is an important biomarker of cardiovascular health and individuals must navigate a trade-off between high and low BP. Chronic high BP leads to tissue damage, but acute low BP will not perfuse the body with oxygen. Therefore, BP could reflect aspects of life history; that is, because it affects the rate and efficacy of energy delivery throughout the body, BP variation may reveal different energetic strategies. To investigate this, we measured the BP of 72 children in Utila, Honduras, a small island where residents experience varying levels of energetic and psychosocial stress. 19.4% of children were prehypertensive or hypertensive, revealing substantial variation. We built multiple linear regression models testing the effects of growth, red blood cells, and psychosocial stress on BP, controlling for time spent sitting before measurement, as well as recent food and caffeine consumption. In accordance with the medical literature, we expected that age, being male, and growth would have positive effects on BP. Results showed that height and sex were significant predictors of systolic BP (β=0.23, p=0.02; β=6.20, p=0.04); taller, male children had higher BP. Among the psychosocial variables, we found that food security had a positive effect on systolic BP (β=0.29, p=0.05). The more food-secure an individual is, the higher their BP, contrary to our expectations and the published literature. 32% of the variation in BP was explained by these variables; therefore, a larger percentage of the variation remains unexplained. Future studies should address the complicated relationships between social stressors and physiological outcomes.



Body and identity in the digital age: a bioanthropological analysis of aesthetic norms of young adults in Brazil

Franckel Moreau

Universidade Federal do Pará, Brazil

This research aims to examine the impact of digital technologies on the perception and body identity of young adults, focusing on platforms such as TikTok, Instagram and Facebook. Adopting a bioanthropological approach, which combines biological and cultural dimensions, together with a netnographic methodology, the analysis explores how these social networks shape aesthetic norms and influence body perceptions representations: young adults, confronted with retouched images and idealized content, often feel pressure to reconstruct their bodies, leading them to undergo surgical procedures, such as body modification surgeries, breast augmentation, facial harmonization. Preliminary observations show that this continuous exposure to idealized beauty standards contributes to a redefinition of body identity, exacerbating insecurities, emotional stress, and social comparisons. Faced with these challenges, young people develop coping mechanisms, such as involvement in movements of body positivity, that promote self-acceptance despite the aesthetic pressures. Through a literature review and collection and critical analysis of data, this poster aims to provide an understanding of contemporary issues related to body image. By integrating historical and biocultural perspectives, this research highlights the importance of an interdisciplinary approach to understand modern challenges related to body perception and identity, while also shedding light on the sociocultural implications for the psychological well-being of young adults in the digital age.



“Parenting, partnership, and physiology: The influence of conflict and emotions on hormone synchronization in couples”

Elsa M. Mueller-Filipas, Sarah Dennis, Lee T. Gettler

University of Notre Dame, United States of America

The peripartum period is often characterized by declines in relationship quality and satisfaction via changes in responsibilities and lifestyle that come with caring for a newborn.The transition to parenthood also represents a period of biological sensitivity for both parents, as their physiology acclimates to their new roles and helps shape functioning within family systems. Research on hormone synchronization in couples has shown that synchronization may occur between partners and may be associated with variation in relationship quality and interaction patterns. To examine the potential intersections between new parents’ hormone responses and synchronization with conflict behaviors, we drew on a U.S.-based study of 49 mother-father pairs observed during a conflict interaction task. Saliva samples taken pre and post-interaction were assayed for cortisol, testosterone, and oxytocin. If mothers’ behavior was more negative during the interaction, their testosterone was significantly lower (p<0.01) as was their oxytocin (p<0.01) but this was not true for fathers. Cortisol was not significantly associated with parents’ negative behaviors. For cortisol, there was evidence of significant linkage, such that mothers' cortisol predicted fathers' cortisol and vice versa, and we found similar linkage patterns for parents’ testosterone (p<0.01). We found modest support for fathers’ negative emotions moderating maternal-paternal linkages for fathers’ testosterone (p<0.01). These findings support prior research that suggests physiological synchronization can occur in the form of hormone linkages, and that there may be gender differences for hormone responses in relation to emotion within couple conflict.



Daily physical activity levels among subsistence-society children and adolescents in the Congo Basin

Henry Nadile7, Sheina Lew-Levy1, David R. Samson2, Aisha Mir2, Vidrige Kandza3, Haneul Jang4, Francy Kiabiya Ntamboudila5, Derlan Bihoundou Mouketou6, Chelvin Destin Siassia Vindou5, Evrad Ngalekandza5, Roglane Goulou5, Chancelline Mboutou5, Adam Howell Boyette3, Lee T. Gettler7

1Durham University, England; 2University of Toronto Mississauga, Canada; 3Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Germany; 4Institute of Advanced Study in Toulouse, France; 5Marien Ngouabi University, Republic of the Congo; 6Institut national de recherche en sciences sociales et humaines, Republic of the Congo; 7University of Notre Dame, United States

Sufficient physical activity promotes healthy growth and development for children. Specifically, greater physical activity has been linked to lower long-term risk of poor mental well-being and obesity and promotes muscle strength. Physical activity is vital for children in post-industrial societies, where societal requirements, such as schooling, and certain cultural practices often limit routine movement. In contrast to post-industrial contexts, we know little about the objective physical demands on children in subsistence communities where the physical demands of daily life may pose a challenge to growth and development under energetically challenging conditions. We used Motionwatch-8 actigraphy watches to measure moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) among youth (N=50; aged 9-18) in two subsistence communities (Bandongo and BaYaka) in the Congo Basin. Results indicated no significant differences in MVPA between Bayaka and Bandongo youth. Participants spent a large portion of their daily time engaging in MVPA (mean: 4.1 hours per day), which is much greater than similarly-aged American youth. Girls in each community engaged in more hours of MVPA than boys, averaging 4.8 hours compared to boys’ 3.7. (p<0.05). Across both communities, the youngest and middle-aged children participated in more MVPA than older adolescents (p<0.01). These results indicate the high levels of demanding physical activity that these children engage in on a daily basis in their rainforest communities, which could be an important health consideration if they face marginal nutritional conditions. Subsequent analyses will compare Bayaka and Bandongo children's physical activity to their anthropometric measures.



Interactions between the Val66Met BDNF Polymorphism and Vigorous Physical Activity on Brain Volume in Middle-Aged and Older Adults

Anamika Nanda1, Daniel H. Aslan1, M. Katherine Sayre2, Pradyumna K. Bhardwaj3, Madeline Ally3, Hyun Song3, Amit Amora4, Silvio Maltagliati1, Mark H.C. Lai5, Rand R. Wilcox5, Yann C. Klimentidis4,6, Gene E. Alexander3,6,7,8,9, David A. Raichlen1,10

1Human and Evolutionary Biology Section, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA; 2Department of Anthropology, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, USA; 3Department of Psychology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA; 4Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA; 5Department of Psychology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA; 6BIO5 Institute, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA; 7Evelyn F. McKnight Brain Institute, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA; 8Department of Psychiatry, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA; 9Neuroscience Graduate Interdisciplinary Program, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA; 10Department of Anthropology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is a key protein upregulated by physical activity (PA) and may influence adult hippocampal neurogenesis. Recent work suggests that the Val66Met polymorphism reduces secretion of activity-dependent BDNF, which may negatively impact brain health. Genomic analyses identified evidence of positive selection at the BDNF genomic region, specifically the Val66-carrying haplotype. However, it is unclear how the Val66Met polymorphism interacts with PA to potentially affect brain structure, limiting our understanding of selection on the BDNF gene. Here, we used data from the UK Biobank to examine left and right hippocampal volumes, genotype data, and both moderate physical activity (MPA) and vigorous physical activity (VPA) via device-measured actigraphy data in middle-aged to older adults (N=14,203). In general linear models, there was no interaction between MPA and Val66Met for left and right hippocampal volumes (P>0.05). However, there was a significant interaction between VPA and Val66Met for left hippocampal volume (P=0.004; 𝜷=1.41e03) and right hippocampal volume (P=0.04; 𝜷=1.01e03). VPA significantly predicted left (P=0.011; 𝜷=3.66e02) and right hippocampal volumes (P=0.028; 𝜷=3.26e02) exclusively for Met carriers (N=4,884). These results suggest that the interaction of PA with Val66Met polymorphism on hippocampal volume may be intensity-dependent and the relationships between VPA and hippocampal volumes may vary by Val66Met genotype. Carriers may possess an activity-dependent BDNF mechanism linking VPA with larger hippocampal volumes. We hypothesize that the Met allele may have been advantageous in ancestral environments characterized by high VPA demands, whereas in modern environments, the Val/Val genotype is now favored for promoting brain health.



Rural Embodiment and Community Health (REACH) study: Measuring childhood physical activity using accelerometry in low-resource United States communities

Katherine L Nemeth1, Tara J Cepon-Robins2, Jade A Beauregard1, Carlye Chaney3,4, Elizabeth K Mallott3, Anna Samsonov5, Theresa E Gildner1

1Department of Anthropology, Washington University in Saint Louis, Saint Louis, MO; 2Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, CO; 3Department of Biology, Washington University in Saint Louis, Saint Louis, MO; 4Department of Anthropology, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO; 5Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, TX

Accelerometry, an objective measure of physical activity (PA), is used by human biologists to understand childhood energy expenditure and PA patterns within lower-income countries. However, PA and related health outcomes have not been studied using accelerometry in low-resource areas of high-income countries. This pilot study assesses the feasibility of accelerometry use for measuring PA in 28 children (ages 3-12, 46% female) from two low-resource communities in the Mississippi Delta and Southwestern Illinois. We present accelerometry metrics (i.e., average acceleration [a measure of activity volume], intensity gradient [a measure of activity intensity]) that allow for greater cross-study comparisons than metrics more commonly used in human biology research that depend on population and device specific cutoffs (e.g., time spent in moderate to vigorous PA [MVPA]). Participants wore an Axivity AX3 accelerometer on their non-dominant wrist and met the study wear time requirement (10+ hours/day, 4+ days). Parents and children completed PA questionnaires and interviews about their experience with the device. While 54% of children found the band uncomfortable at times, 89% said they would wear an accelerometer again. Pearson’s correlations demonstrate that MVPA was correlated with average acceleration (r(26) = 0.95, p <0.0001) and intensity gradient (r(26) = 0.54, p = 0.002). This study suggests that wrist-worn accelerometers are feasible for measuring children’s PA in low-resource U.S. communities. Improving our understanding and reporting of childhood PA in low-resource U.S. communities will clarify how these environments influence childhood activity patterns and related risk factors (e.g., body composition, bone density/health) for adult disease.



Development and optimization of a bacteria killing assay for assessing innate immune function using human saliva

Tomasz Nowak1, Jeffrey Gassen2, Sean Prall3, Michael Muehlenbein1

1Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, TX; 2Department of Psychiatry, University of California, Los Angeles, CA; 3Department of Anthropology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA

The bacteria killing assay (BKA) is a versatile method for evaluating the innate immune response by measuring the bactericidal capacity of biological fluids. We present an optimized protocol for a saliva-based BKA, which offers a non-invasive and functional approach to assess immune competence in human populations. The protocol includes critical steps for saliva collection, storage, and preparation of bacterial solutions. We tested the effects of freeze/thaw cycles, heat inactivation, storage conditions, and salivary flow rate on bacterial killing capacity. Results showed that multiple freeze/thaw cycles did not significantly affect the percentage of bacteria killed, indicating the stability of samples across various handling conditions. Additionally, salivary flow rate had a moderate positive correlation with killing capacity, though not statistically significant in this dataset. An 8-minute heat inactivation at 42°C was sufficient to reduce contamination while preserving sample integrity. Saliva samples stored at room temperature exhibited reduced killing capacity compared to samples stored at -20°C and -80°C. The assay also demonstrated consistent stability across repeated samples collected from the same individuals, indicating low within-person variability. The protocol was further tested using different bacterial species, demonstrating its utility across various pathogens. This protocol is especially advantageous for large-scale epidemiological studies due to its simplicity, cost-effectiveness, and adaptability for field research. The findings underscore the reliability of the saliva-based BKA as a functional measure of innate immune function, with significant applications in ecoimmunology and human health.



“I never don’t have water because I collect rainwater”: Water insecurity and sociocultural factors in an Indigenous community of northern Argentina

Sofia Irene Olmedo1, Claudia Rita Valeggia2, Cecilia Palavecino3, Rafael Perez-Escamilla4

1Instituto sobre Lenguaje, Sociedad y Territorio. CONICET, Argentine Republic; 2Department of Anthropology, Yale University, New Haven, USA; 3Member of Pilagá community, La Bomba, Formosa, Argentina; 4Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Yale School of Public Health, Yale University, New Haven, USA

The lifestyles and worldviews of Indigenous communities have long been deeply intertwined with natural resources, particularly water. However, these vital resources are now severely threatened by systemic social marginalization and the enduring impacts of colonization, further violating the human right to water access. Our primary objective was to assess the extent of water insecurity and explore its sociocultural associations in a Pilagá community in Formosa, Argentina. This mixed-methods cross-sectional study, conducted in 2023, involved data collection from Pilagá households representing 59 family clusters, covering all family units in the community. We employed a pre-validated HWISE survey. Qualitative data were gathered through semi-structured interviews and participant observation. The average age of participants was 36.8 ± 12.7 years, with most being women, who primarily handled the task of fetching water. Water insecurity was prevalent, affecting 62% of households, most of which depended on well pumps. In response, households engaged in resource sharing, which strained relationships around water access. Through an ecological model, we identified multiple interrelated contextual factors, revealing that shifts in one area had ripple effects across others. Key factors included water sources, cultural perceptions of water, resource distribution, and social dynamics around water. The Pilagá community confronts pervasive water insecurity within a challenging and evolving socio-ecological landscape.



Minimally invasive measurement of zonulin, a key biomarker for environmental enteric dysfunction and childhood growth faltering, in dried blood spot samples

Luna S. Orozco1, Elizabeth Y. Kim2, Emma Shoemaker1, Laila Fahed1, Jeffery Gassen3, Tomasz J. Nowak6, Sally P. Weaver4, Erich J. Baker5, Michael P. Muehlenbein6, Samuel S. Urlacher6

1Human Evolutionary Biology and Health Lab, Baylor University, Waco, TX; 2Department of Biology, Baylor University, Waco, TX; 3Department of Psychiatry, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA; 4Waco Family Medicine, Waco, TX; 5Department of Computer Science, Belmont University, Nashville, TN; 6Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, TX

Pathogen exposure from unsanitary living conditions can damage the gut, leading to decreased barrier integrity and poor nutrient absorption. This subclinical condition – termed environmental enteric dysfunction (EED) – is the reality for millions of children globally and is now recognized as the world’s leading cause of childhood growth faltering. Problematically, assessment of EED requires invasive procedures, such as venipuncture blood sampling. This approach is not practical and is burdensome for many groups, especially children living in low-to-middle income countries where EED is common. Recent research has shown that zonulin is a biomarker for the intestinal permeability aspect of EED pathophysiology, due to its role in the regulation of tight junctions in epithelial cells. Here, we validate the measurement of a zonulin in minimally invasive finger-prick dried blood spot (DBS) samples using a commercially available ELISA kit (Elabscience, E-EL-H5560). Following initial assay optimization, zonulin was measured in the ‘Waco100’ matched DBS and serum sample set. Zonulin was reliably detected in all DBS samples (mean = 4.963±4.383 pg/mL) and exhibited a strong linear relationship between DBS and serum values (r2 = 0.96; Passing-Bablok regression). Additional validation testing indicated acceptable metrics for spike and recovery (101.5±12.7% recovery), dilutional linearity (96.4±15.5% recovery), and freeze-thaw/hot-cold analyte stability (all effects p > 0.05). These results demonstrate strong performance and reliability for measuring zonulin in DBS samples. Human biologists are ideally positioned to use this minimally invasive zonulin measurement approach to advance the study of EED and to investigate the pathways of growth faltering across diverse populations.



Agua a cuentagotas: estrategias ante la inseguridad hídrica y sus efectos en la salud psicosocial de mujeres cabezas de familia en colonias populares de Xalapa, Veracruz, México.

María José Palmeros de la Rosa1, Alejandra Nuñez de la Mora2, Adriana Rodríguez Barraza2

1Facultad de Psicología, Universidad Veracruzana, México; 2Instituto de Investigaciones Psicológicas, Universidad Veracruzana, México

En años recientes, el gobierno de la ciudad de Xalapa, Veracruz ha implementado un sistema de suministro intermitente de agua para cubrir la creciente demanda de una población en aumento y un déficit en la disponibilidad resultado de cambios en la hidrología de la región asociados a la deforestación y el cambio climático. Se ha documentado que este tipo de suministro tiene efectos negativos en la infraestructura y la calidad del agua. Sin embargo, son pocos los trabajos que se han ocupado del impacto de esta forma de inseguridad hídrica en la vida diaria y el bienestar de quienes la padecen, en particular, en la de mujeres cabezas de familia, a quienes comúnmente se asigna la gestión del agua como parte de sus responsabilidades de cuidados. El objetivo del presente trabajo fue recabar, mediante entrevistas en profundidad, las experiencias asociadas al abasto racionado e intermitente de agua, las estrategias para hacerle frente y las repercusiones directas e indirectas en las decisiones cotidianas y la salud psicosocial de mujeres habitantes en colonias populares de la ciudad. Se discuten los efectos del desabasto en términos económicos, de tiempo y de salud y bienestar percibidos, así como el impacto de la incertidumbre en las dinámicas familiares y convivencia comunitarias.



Embodied breastfeeding experiences of shame and guilt: An interdisciplinary approach between human biology and engaged philosophy

Nerli Paredes Ruvalcaba, Ayomide Yomi-Odedeyi

Michigan State University, United States of America

Breast/chest-feeding is a form of parental investment with health benefits for infants and lactating people. Presently, there is reportedly rising tension between public health messaging to increase breast/chest-feeding rates and the felt pressure to breast/chest-feed among birthing parents. This tension has the potential to negatively impact efforts to promote breast/chest-feeding. The aim of this study was to apply an interdisciplinary approach combining an evolutionary biological perspective and an engaged feminist philosophy approach of embodiment to breast/chest-feeding, to account for the deep connections between experiences and emotions with our human biology and evolutionary history. Semi-structured interviews with first-time mothers in Veracruz, Mexico (n=25), and infant data (n=25) on anthropometric measurements, symptoms of infection, and feeding practices were analyzed. Results suggest that breastfeeding decreased the risk of infection, but the introduction of milk formula soon after birth at hospitals was a barrier that hindered breastfeeding practices and mothers experienced shame and guilt when unable to breastfeed as planned. Understanding the experiences of mothers with a feminist analysis of shame and guilt can provide insights into why current efforts to promote breast/chest-feeding are not working and inform future public health messaging committed to health equity and justice to center the reported lived experiences of mothers, provide insights into the complicated realities of breast/chest-feeding, and deliver practical support. This study offers an interdisciplinary approach to interchange knowledge and perspectives regarding human lactation research and contributes to the area of human biology that utilizes qualitative approaches to understand the multifaceted factors that impact human biology.



Does corn flour consumption influence iron absorption and anemia in children in Kilimanjaro?

S Patel1, A Altman1, M Gauck1, B Kitali2,3, S Saca1, F Shirima4, N Ng’unda4, Z Massawe4, B Kavishe4, E Muro4, P Melendez-Noriega1, S Winter1, T Assenga4, N Sawe4, I Haule4, H Uronu4, AA Uronu4, A Masokoto4, E Samky4, E Ngomu4, I Mushi4, J Feruzi4, S Semuva4, I Swai4, R Philemon2,4, I Kiwelu2,4, B Mmbaga2,4, K Wander1

1Binghamton University, Department of Anthropology, Binghamton, NY, United States of America; 2Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre, Moshi, Kilimanjaro, United Republic of Tanzania; 3Kilimanjaro Christian Medical University College, Moshi, Kilimanjaro, United Republic of Tanzania; 4Kilimanjaro Clinical Research Institute, Moshi, Kilimanjaro, United Republic of Tanzania

Severe iron deficiency can increase risk for cognitive or behavioral delays during a young child’s growth and development. Phytate compounds in cereal grains can prevent iron absorption, limiting access to this crucial micronutrient. Corn flour porridge and ugali, a starch-based dish served with stew, remain staple foods for many households in Sub-Saharan Africa. While eating corn flour has been associated with iron deficiency among infants, the nutritional consequences of corn flour consumption among young children are unclear. We explored the relationship between corn flour consumption and iron nutrition status in children (2-4 years) in Kilimanjaro, Tanzania. 24-hour dietary recalls were recorded for 281 children over 12 months while blood biomarkers were analyzed to estimate rates of iron deficiency (zinc protoporphyrin:heme ratio) and anemia (hemoglobin). At baseline, ugali consumption is reported in over 55% of children while 19.6% of children were iron deficient. Estimates of daily iron intake will be estimated from these dietary recalls via nutrient analysis software (NutritionistPro, Axxya). We will use logistic regression models to estimate the relationship between iron status and corn flour consumption and explore if increased consumption corresponds to reduced iron absorption. Surprisingly, our previous analysis suggests tea consumption, which is also high in phytates, among these children was associated with lower risk for anemia (OR: 0.51, 95% CI: 0.26 - 1.03). In light of these surprising findings, it is important to assess corn flour as another dietary staple as a risk factor for iron deficiency.



Effectiveness of group antenatal care in increasing healthcare utilization and improving maternal and infant outcomes in Malawi

Crystal L Patil1, Elizabeth T Abrams2, Xiaohan Mei3, Li Liu3, Allissa A Desloge4, Esnath Kapito5, Ellen Chirwa5, Genesis Chorwe-Sungani6, Kathleen F Norr7

1Department of Health Behavior and Biological Sciences, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA; 2Independent Researcher and Consultant, 2243 Midvale Avenue, Los Angeles, CA, USA; 3Epidemiology and Biostatistics Division, University of Illinois Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA; 4Department of Epidemiology and Community Health, University of North Carolina Charlotte, Charlotte, NC, USA; 5Nursing and Midwifery Department, Kamuzu University of Health Science, Blantyre, Malawi; 6Mental Health Nursing Department, Kamuzu University of Health Science, Blantyre, Malaw; 7Department of Human Development Nursing Science, University of Illinois Chicago, 845 South Damen Avenue (MC 802), Chicago, IL, USA

US-based research shows that Group antenatal care (ANC) effectively improves outcomes, including reduced preterm births, increased breastfeeding rates, and better pregnancy spacing. Group ANC has been adapted in dozens of low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). In 2016, WHO recommended increasing ANC contacts from four (ANC4+) to eight (ANC8+) and emphasized respectful care; they identified Group ANC as a promising service delivery model in need of rigorous research. We filled this gap by completing an effectiveness trial in Blantyre, Malawi, hypothesizing that Group ANC would increase ANC attendance and lead to fewer low birth weight (LBW) newborns. Group effects on outcomes were evaluated using t-tests, Mann-Whitney, or Chi-squared tests. Multivariable linear regression or logistic regression models, adjusted for covariates, for post-intervention outcomes were used to assess effectiveness. Participants in Group ANC had more ANC contacts than those in Individual ANC (5.6 vs 4.8; p < 0.0001); the regression model showed a positive impact of Group ANC (Estimate = 0.74). Those in Group ANC were 1.64 times and 3.27 times more likely to complete ANC4+ and ANC8+ (16.9% Group vs 5.8% Individual), respectively. Covariates associated with the mean number and ANC4+ outcomes were education, age, residence, and client-to-midwife ratios. Age was the only factor related to ANC8+. At 9.5% in Individual and 11.0% in Group ANC, LBW rates were not significantly different (p = 0.344). Despite no impact on LBW, this study shows that Group ANC significantly increases healthcare utilization and highlights its potential to improve maternal and infant outcomes in LMICs.



Preliminary analysis of radial bone mineral density in an urban NYC and rural subsistence-level female cohort

SC Pirtle1,2, FC Madimenos1,2,3, JJ Snodgrass4,5, MA Liebert6, SS Urlacher7, LS Sugiyama4, SB Levy1,2,8

1CUNY Graduate Center, New York, NY; 2New York Consortium in Evolutionary Primatology, New York, NY; 3CUNY Queens College, Flushing, NY; 4University of Oregon, Eugene, OR; 5Global Station for Indigenous Studies & Cultural Diversity, Hokkaido University, Japan; 6Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ; 7Baylor University, Waco, TX; 8CUNY Hunter College, New York, NY

Bone mineral density (BMD) is a clinical measure for predicting fracture and osteoporosis risk and can be estimated using ultrasonometry. While weight-bearing bones (e.g., tibia, calcaneus) are more commonly measured, distal forearm (i.e., radial) BMD (rBMD) may better predict fracture risk in the forearm and axial skeleton. Moreover, rBMD may more accurately reflect density in skeletal sites not greatly influenced by activity patterns, unlike weight-bearing bones. Here we present preliminary data on rBMD in females from two groups: a NYC-based cohort and rural, subsistence-level Indigenous Ecuadorian Shuar.

Participants included 33 Shuar and 38 NYC females (ages 18–40). Anthropometric measures were collected (height, weight, %body fat) using standard procedures and rBMD was estimated using a MiniOmni ultrasonometer targeting the distal radius of the non-dominant arm.

Mann-Whitney test identified significantly lower rBMD (Shuar: 4029, NYC: 4091 m/s), lower % body fat (Shuar: 22.6, NYC: 28.6%), and smaller body size (i.e., height and weight) among Shuar compared to NYC participants. Multivariate regression revealed that group affiliation and age, but not % body fat, were significant predictors of rBMD. Significance was defined as p ≤ 0.05.

While previous research shows higher calcaneal BMD among Shuar compared to other populations, the present analysis indicates comparatively lower rBMD. These findings suggest other factors, aside from physical activity, influence rBMD and highlight the importance of measuring multiple sites for a complete picture of skeletal health. Future research should also investigate the influence of other variables (e.g., reproductive status) to better understand rBMD in these two groups.



Climate change and health among Rendille people in Kenya

AC Pisor1, D Singh2, DO Omia3, E Osoro4, D Oketch4, MK Njenga4

1Department of Anthropology & Social Science Research Institute, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA; 2School of the Environment, Washington State University, Vancouver, WA; 3Department of Anthropology, Gender and African Studies, University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya; 4Paul G. Allen School for Global Health, Washington State University, Nairobi, Kenya

Extremes in precipitation are increasingly impacting the health of mobile pastoralists and their livestock in Northern Kenya. Qualitative interviews with Rendille people reveal interrelated changes in movement patterns and extended time away from home during prolonged dry periods, which is contributing to increased exposure to heat, vector- and water-borne diseases, and mental ill-health, especially following animal loss. Here, we highlight new insights from two surveys with Rendille people – one with women who remain in semi-permanent settlements (n=40) and one with men who spend months away from home to take their animals for grazing, sometimes traveling as far as 200-300 km (n=40). Focusing on recent droughts and recent flash floods, we review participants’ experiences of impacts on their physical and mental health, their responses to these impacts, and how participants’ responses affect their health in turn. Building on these results, we discuss the multiple future directions of our collaboration, including documenting longitudinally the health impacts, both positive and negative, of climate-related mobility and risk-management strategies.



Relationship between Salivary Cortisol and Epigenetic “Clock” Measures of Biological Aging

Sasha R Post1, Calen P Ryan2, Nanette R Lee3, Delia B Carba3, Julie L MacIsaac4, David TS Lin4, Parmida Atashzay4, Michael S Kobor4,5,6,7, Christopher W Kuzawa1

1Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA; 2Robert N. Butler Columbia Aging Center, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY; 3USC-Office of Population Studies Foundation, University of San Carlos, Cebu City, Philippines; 4BC Children’s Hospital Research Institute, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada; 5Child and Brain Development Program, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Toronto, ON, Canada; 6Department of Medical Genetics, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada; 7Centre for Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics, Vancouver, BC, Canada

Epigenetic clocks estimate biological aging based on patterns of methylation within the genome. Epigenetic clocks have been shown to be accelerated, reflecting faster aging, by a range of unhealthy exposures or lifestyle factors and to prospectively predict higher risk for all cause mortality. Here we explore relationships between a suite of epigenetic clocks and diurnal rhythms of cortisol, a key stress hormone known to mediate relationships between stress experience and health. Data come from the Cebu Longitudinal Health and Nutrition Survey (CLHNS), a one-year birth cohort study established in 1983-1984. In 2005, when cohort members were 20-22 years old, waking, 30-minute post-waking and pre-bed saliva samples were collected to characterize diurnal cortisol curves, while whole blood was obtained and used to measure DNA methylation at ~850k CpG sites using the Illumina EPIC array. We calculated first-generation clocks trained on chronological age (Horvath, Hannum), second-generation clocks trained on suites of health indicators and mortality (PhenoAge, GrimAge, DNAmTL) and a third-generation clock trained on the pace of change in aging-related biomarkers (DunedinPACE). Relationships were most consistent with bedtime cortisol (reflecting chronic strain); all clocks related in the expected direction, and reached statistical signicance for the GrimAge (r=0.146, p=1.16x10^-8), PhenoAge (r=0.112, p=1.38x10^-5), and DunedinePACE 38 (r=0.063, p=.014) and 45 (r=0.078, p=0.002) clocks. Relationships were less consistent with total cortisol exposure and diurnal slope, but generally pointed to slower aging among individuals with more-robust waking responses. These findings point to plausible relationships between stress physiology and epigenetic markers of aging measured in young adulthood.



Age and sex patterns in the size and kin-makeup of children’s playmate networks

BA Rothamer1, AD Blackwell2, L Glowacki1, JK Hlay1, MAC Hönig2, N Merullo1, I Rodríguez-James1, CB Smith2, CR Hodges-Simeon1

1Boston University, Boston, MA; 2Washington State University, Pullman, WA

Evolutionary theories of social development hypothesize that children’s social behavior is adaptive to their developmental stage while also serving as practice for sex-typical adult social behavior. Therefore, the social relationships in which children invest time and effort are expected to vary with age and sex. Older children and adolescents are expected to engage with more non-kin playmates as they integrate into the broader community. Because adult men generally have larger social networks than women, boys are expected to develop larger play networks than girls as they age. We predicted that older children, especially boys, would have larger networks composed of more non-kin. We surveyed 109 children ages 5 to 17 in Utila, Honduras. Participants self-reported up to eight individuals with whom they had played during the last month. Additional information about playmates included their age, sex, and kin relation to the participant. Using Poisson generalized linear models we tested regressions of playmate count for various playmate identities against participant age and sex. Both boys and girls named fewer immediate kin as playmates with age (β = -0.213, p = 0.002). However, only girls named fewer of all kin types with age (β = -0.071, p = 0.049). Conversely, only boys’ number of non-kin playmates increased with age (β = 0.104, p = 0.015). Investigation of play network sex-segregation with age followed a similar pattern: girls’ playmate networks changed more through the reduction of certain categories of playmates with age whereas boys' networks changed through the increase of other categories.



Ecological and social determinants of early life oxidative stress: Preliminary findings from a low-resource U.S. community

A Samsonov1, JA Beauregard2, KL Nemeth2, C Chaney3,4, J Ainsley4, D Mukundan4, S Hotter4, EK Mallott4, TJ Cepon-Robins5, TE Gildner2, SS Urlacher1

1Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, TX; 2Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 3Department of Anthropology, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO; 4Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 5Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado - Colorado Springs, Colorado Springs, CO

Oxidative stress (OS), the imbalance between reactive oxygen species and antioxidant defenses, plays an important role in human health and aging. OS damage to nucleic acids and other macromolecules is associated with numerous inflammatory, cardiovascular, and neurodegenerative conditions. Problematically, relatively little attention has been given to OS in children and adolescents, despite clear implications of early life OS for human life history evolution and public health. Here, we use pilot data to test if OS—measured using first morning urinary 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG), a biomarker of systemic DNA oxidation—is cross-sectionally associated with select anthropometric and socioeconomic variables among children and adolescents (n = 21, aged 4-12 y) living in a low-resource community in Southwestern Illinois. Initial linear regression findings indicate that OS is negatively associated with BMI z-scores (b = -0.24, p = 0.047), contradictory to the positive relationship typically found in overweight/obese clinical samples. Though not significant, positive trends were also identified between OS and measures of both food and water insecurity (both p < 0.2). These findings suggest that in low-resource settings, greater energy availability may allow for more energetic investment in endogenous antioxidant defenses, limiting OS. Our findings also highlight potentially important pathways for the embodiment of resource insecurity that may be detectable in this context with larger samples. We build on these findings using additional OS biomarkers to further understand the ecological and social drivers of child OS variation and their implications for human energetic trade-offs, lifetime health, and the development of population health inequities.



A Life History Perspective on Maternal Reproductive Investment and Skeletal Health

Annie Megan Santamaria1, Paloma Contreras1, Brigid Gregg2

1University of Michigan, United States of America; 2Michigan Medicine Pediatrics, United States of America

Life history theory predicts that the costs of reproduction trade off with self-maintenance. In humans, maternal investment is metabolically expensive, and complex physiological adaptations support offspring development across pregnancy and lactation. We know that the maternal skeleton acts as a critical reservoir of essential nutrients and a regulator of metabolic homeostasis. Therefore, it is an ideal organ system to study how calcium—a critical nutrient for a growing fetus—is rerouted from the mother to meet the growing needs of her rapidly developing offspring. Here we aim to systematically review the literature on changes in maternal bone density across reproduction, especially during lactation when calcium output is the highest. It is well established that osteocalcin (OCN), a protein secreted by osteoblasts, aids in bone formation and glucose metabolism. The levels of OCN during pregnancy and lactation are linked to parathyroid hormone (PTH) concentrations. This is of interest because PTH plays a crucial role in maintaining calcium balance and facilitating fetal transport throughout pregnancy. Although the relationship between PTH and OCN presents a unique model to understand the trade-off between maternal bone maintenance with reproductive investment, our preliminary results show that there is conflicting evidence regarding osteocalcin's involvement in bone formation and metabolic regulation, alongside varying opinions on the relationship between PTH and OCN. This work highlights the roles of osteocalcin and parathyroid hormone from an evolutionary perspective, to better understand the mechanisms governing this life history trade-off during reproduction.



Effects of Vegetable and Fruit Juicing on Gut and Oral Microbiome Composition

Maria Luisa Savo Sardaro1,2, Veronica Elisabeth Grote1, Jennifer Yijung Baik1, Marco Atallah3, Katherine Ryan Amato1, Melinda Ring1,4

1Northwestern University, Illinois, USA; 2San Raffaele Roma University, Italy; 3University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana-Champaign, Illinois; 4Osher Center for Integrative Health, Northwestern University

Sub-optimal intake of whole grains, fruits, and sodium accounted for over 50% of diet related deaths in the U.S. in 2019 studies. In recent years, juicing is often promoted as a convenient way to increase fruit and vegetable intake, with juice-only diets marketed for digestive cleansing and overall health improvement. However, juicing removes most insoluble fiber, which may diminish the health benefits of whole fruits and vegetables. Lower fiber intake can alter the microbiota, affecting metabolism, immunity, and mental health, though little is known about juicing's specific effects on the microbiota.

This study addresses this gap by exploring how juicing impacts gut and oral microbiome composition. Fourteen participants followed one of three diets—exclusive juice, juice plus food, or plant-based food—for three days. Microbiota samples (stool, saliva, and cheek swabs) were collected at baseline, pre-intervention, post-intervention, and 14 days post-intervention. 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing was used to analyze microbiota composition.

Results revealed changes in oral microbiota, particularly in the families Streptococcaceae and Neisseriaceae, potentially due to high sugar and low fiber intake. Although no significant shifts in overall gut microbiome diversity were observed, certain taxa associated with gut permeability, inflammation, and cognitive decline increased. These findings suggest that short-term juice consumption may negatively affect the microbiota, highlighting the need for further research on diet-microbiome-disease interactions to inform dietary recommendations.



Associations between adult peer rankings of child health and indicators of child well-being among BaYaka foragers and Bandongo fisher-farmers in the Congo Basin

NK Shabu1, AH Boyette2, V Miegakanda3, MS Sarma4, S Lew-Levy5, LT Gettler1

1Department of Anthropology, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN; 2Department of Human Behavior, Ecology and Culture, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany; 3Institut National de Santé Publique, Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo; 4Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; 5Department of Psychology, Durham University, Durham, England

In research with subsistence societies, peer rankings are often used to measure important cultural domains, such as subsistence productivity and ethnomedical knowledge. A benefit of this method is the ability to gain cultural insights from residents with longer-term community knowledge. However, aspects of local cultural practices and research design can contribute to inaccuracies using this approach. As part of a larger study in the Republic of the Congo, we asked fathers from BaYaka forager and Bandongo fisher-farmer communities to rank other fathers on the health of their children and evaluated indicators fathers might use for such rankings. Fathers with more living children were ranked as having healthier children in each community (p<0.01), even after adjusting for fathers’ age, which likewise correlated positively with health rankings. Since physical measures are often used to indicate health, we also analyzed anthropometrics and found that Bandongo children had thicker skinfolds and higher weight-for-height when their fathers were ranked as having healthier children (p<0.01). However, Bayaka rankings were not significantly associated with anthropometrics. The lack of correlation between BaYaka rankings and anthropometrics may result from cultural differences between communities. Bayaka are more egalitarian, cooperate in parenting, and pool resources, reducing variation in nutrition and growth. Bayaka egalitarianism and aversion to hierarchy may also make it challenging for men to rank one another in this domain. These results provide some support for the use of peer-ranking methods but also reflect how cultural dynamics might limit the approach in specific domains depending on the community.



Acculturation and its influence on social support and breastfeeding among Puerto Rican mothers in the US

Kassandra Kay Schleper

UCLA, United States of America

Social support is an important predictor of maternal and child health outcomes, but localized social and cultural norms are likely to impact support pathways. Among Hispanic (Latina) women, degree of acculturation is a key indicator of these norms. Because breastfeeding requires extensive social and informational support, acculturation may affect social support, and in turn impact breastfeeding outcomes. While studies have investigated the impacts of acculturation and social support on breastfeeding separately, I aim to understand how these two factors interact. Here, I test how social support affects the pathway between acculturation and breastfeeding outcomes among Puerto Rican women living in the mainland US by integrating methods and concepts from public health and evolutionary anthropology. Utilizing data from the Puerto Rican Maternal and Infant Health Study (PRMIHS), I use structural equation modeling to understand the relationship between language acculturation and social acculturation, emotional support, instrumental support, and 5 different breastfeeding outcomes in a cohort of n=1,222 Puerto Rican women who gave birth in the mainland US in 1995-1996. Results support the notion that level of acculturation is inversely related to breastfeeding outcomes. Specifically, social acculturation was inversely related to whether the mother was advised to breastfeed or not (p = 0.001). Language acculturation was also significantly related to instrumental support and emotional support; women who utilized Spanish more than English received more instrumental support (p = 0.009) and more emotional support (p = 0.008). There were no significant effects on different forms of support and breastfeeding outcomes.



Connectedness to nature, participation in traditional religious ceremonies, and health among rural and urban Wixárika in Jalisco, Mexico

Eric C Shattuck1,2,3, Leela McKinnon3,4, Igor Ramos Herrera5, Rene Crocker Sagastume5, Quetzabel de la Cruz5, Pari Temai González Hernández5, Addy Villaseñor5, Yara Martín5, Paola Pérez5, Sofia Muñoz5, Thankam Sunil6, David Samson3,4

1Department of Anthropology, Florida State University, United States of America; 2Native American and Indigenous Studies Center, Florida State University, United States of America; 3Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto Mississauga; 4Centre for Urban Environments, University of Toronto Mississauga; 5Departamento de Salud Pública, Centro Universitario de Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad de Guadalajara; 6Department of Public Health, University of Tennessee Knoxville

Research highlights potential health benefits of connectedness to nature (i.e., an experiential sense of oneness with nature) as well as time spent in nature, including for stress, wellbeing, and immune function. However, these results are largely restricted to samples from the Global North and are unexplored among Indigenous cultures, many of which view humans as an intrinsic part of nature and whose traditional ceremonies reinforce this “cosmovision”. We explored the relationship between connectedness to nature (CN), participation in traditional ceremonies, sleep, and self-reported physical and mental health in a sample of rural and urban Wixárika adults (n=127, mean age=34, 68.5% female). We predicted that greater CN and participation in ceremonies would be associated with better health and sleep measures. Rural participants reported worse physical and mental health, but greater CN (p<0.001 for all) and more frequent ceremony participation (p=0.001). There were no effects of CN and ceremony participation on objective and subjective sleep measures. In regression models, there was an interaction effect between CN and location, such that greater CN predicted better physical (b = -1.125, p=0.009) and mental (b = -0.86, p=0.04) health in the rural location only. The effect on physical health remained after adjusting for ceremony participation (b = -0.92, p=0.03). Frequent (b = -0.75, p=0.03) and very frequent (b = -0.81, p=0.02) ceremony participation were also directly related to better physical health in both locations. Our findings highlight the importance of nature and ceremonial participation for Wixárika health in a wider context of rural-urban migration.



The impact of pathogen exposure and water insecurity on children’s growth: A pilot study among rural Maasai communities in Oloirouwa, Kenya

Anna Shinina Shani, Samuel Urlacher

Baylor University, United States of America

1Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, TX

Child growth faltering in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) remains a primary global health concern. In Kenya, rural-living groups, such as Maasai, receive limited institutional support and face other socioeconomic and environmental challenges that may drive disruption of children’s growth. Here, we use pilot data from a new project to investigate the impact of two key ecological factors – pathogen exposure and water insecurity – on childhood growth among rural-living Maasai in Oloirouwa, Kenya. Data were collected from 177 children (aged 4-12 years) living in 100 households across six communities. Measures included standard anthropometry, household conditions, and the household water insecurity experiences (HWISE) scale. Descriptive analyses indicate a high degree of pathogen exposure (e.g., 79% of households have no toilet/latrine) and water insecurity (37% of all households HWISE > 12), as well as common child growth faltering (24% stunted, 21% underweight, 20% wasted). Results from mixed models identified having no toilet/latrine as a significant predictor of linear growth. Children from households with no toilet/latrine had lower height-for-age z-score (β = -0.76, SE = 0.29, p = 0.011) and 1.4 times greater odds of stunting (p = 0.017). Trends were also observed for potential effects of water insecurity on child growth (p < 0.1), but these did not reach significance in preliminary models. These initial findings highlight the impact of ecological factors on children’s growth among Maasai. Future analyses will further investigate the role of water insecurity in the adversity-growth axis among Maasai and other children in LMICs.

Support: CIFAR Azrieli Global Scholars Program; Baylor University



Blood pressure at midlife among women in the Brazilian Amazon

Hilton P. Silva1, Ligia A. Filgueiras2, Lynnette L Sievert3

1Universidade Federal do Pará and Universidade de Brasília, Brazil; 2Universidade do Estado do Pará; 3UMass Amherst, USA

As women progress through the menopause transition, there is increasing risk for cardiovascular disease and other health concerns. Here, we have an opportunity to examine blood pressure (BP) among women aged 35 to 60 drawn from 6 rural communities (n=125) in the Brazilian Amazon. Data were collected with face-to-face interviews and included anthropometric and BP measurements. Age categories roughly correspond to pre-, peri-, and post-menopausal categories. Among women aged 50 to 60 years, mean systolic BP was significantly higher (138.1 mmhg, s.d. 24.1; n=39) compared to women aged 45 to 49 (125.5 mmhg, s.d. 22.9, n=34) and 35 to 44 years (116.2 mmhg, s.d. 16.5; n=52) (p<0.001). The same pattern was true for diastolic BP, which was highest among women aged 50 to 60 years (86.6 mmhg, s.d.16.2) compared to women aged 45 to 49 (82.0 mmhg, s.d. 17.5) and 35 to 44 years (77.8 mmhg, s.d. 12.8) (p=0.026). Body mass index (BMI, kg/m2), waist circumference, and waist/height ratio (but not waist/hip ratio) increased significantly with age so that women aged 50 to 60 years had the highest values. Systolic and diastolic BP measurements were significantly positively correlated with BMI, waist circumference, and waist/height ratio (but not waist/hip ratio). After adjusting for smoking, quilombola/caboclo status, and adiposity, age continued to be positively associated with systolic BP, but not consistently associated with diastolic BP. The increase in BP among women aged 50 and older suggests post-menopausal status may play a role, as in other rural and urban populations.



Unraveling population histories: Mitochondrial DNA analysis in the Casas Grandes region of Mexico

Meradeth Snow1, Michael Searcy2, Tre Blohm1, Samuel Jensen4, Jose Luis Punzo Dias3, Courtney Manthey1

1University of Montana, United States of America; 2Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, USA; 3Instituto Nacional de Antropolgía e Historia, Morelia, Michoacán, México; 4University of Oklahoma

Introduction: The Casas Grandes region in northwest Chihuahua, Mexico, is a key area for examining interactions between the Southwest/Northwest and Mesoamerica due to its unique geographical position. Previous research has proposed that the growth of the Casas Grandes population in the thirteenth century AD was driven by migrations from Mesoamerica or the US Southwest. We conducted a comprehensive analysis of full mitochondrial genetic data from individuals buried at archaeological sites spanning both earlier (the Convento site), and later (the Paquimé site) time periods to reassess these migration hypotheses.

Methods: Tooth and bone samples were collected from human remains at the Museo de las Culturas del Norte (Casas Grandes, Chihuahua, Mexico), in accordance with Mexican laws and ethical regulations. We selected samples from areas across the two sites to examine genetic distribution and chronometric variability.

Results: 116 samples provided sufficient preserved DNA for haplogroup determination (Convento burials=16; Paquimé burials=100). Sequencing success rates were similar across both sites. While test of haplogroup frequencies revealed differences between the time periods (p=0.0366 for Fisher’s Exact), sequencing of the mitogenome revealed shared maternal lineages across all chronometric time periods. Median Joining Networks comparing mitogenomes from across the Americas also revealed common haplotype lineages between widely dispersed populations.

Discussion: The Casas Grandes region likely did not experience significant migration between the Viejo and Medio periods, as any such migration had minimal impact on mitochondrial DNA. Instead of being passive recipients of external influences, the construction of Paquimé reflects internal ingenuity, social solidarity, and proactive change.



Biocultural perspectives on perceived economic insecurity and chronic stress: resilience strategies of women experiencing food insecurity in Minatitlán (Mexico)

Geneviève Lola Stone1, Alejandra Núñez-de la Mora2, Mhairi Gibson3, Tania Griffin4, Angeliki Papadaki1, Lucía Contreras5, María Eugenia Ordaz5

1School for Policy Studies, University of Bristol (Bristol, United Kingdom); 2Instituto de Investigaciones Psicológicas, Universidad Veracruzana (Xalapa, México); 3Department of Anthropology & Archaeology, University of Bristol (Bristol, United Kingdom); 4Department for Health, University of Bath (Bath, United Kingdom); 5Fundación Cucharada de Amor, Minatilán (Minatitlán, México)

Perceived Economic Insecurity (PEI), defined as the inability to access sufficient resources to protect against immediate or future adverse circumstances, may be linked to worse health outcomes via the stress response. There is a paucity of research in Mexico on the dynamics between PEI and Food Insecurity (FI), which are both characterized by unpredictability. This mixed-method study aims to test, for the first time, associations between PEI, FI, and chronic stress from a biocultural perspective, as well as explore resilience strategies employed by women facing FI in an urban environment. Participants were recruited via the Cucharada de Amor Foundation, a non-profit organization that runs a foodbank service in the city of Minatitlán, Mexico. Primary quantitative survey data were collected to assess PEI, FI, and chronic stress. A sub-sample of participants were invited to take part in a semi-structured interview to explore the lived experience of economic insecurity, resilience strategies, and perceptions of mental wellbeing. Both PEI and FI were positively associated with higher levels of perceived chronic stress (p<0.005). Interview findings suggested that PEI and FI are not always experienced simultaneously as other non-income dependent strategies to access food, even in an urban environment, may act as a buffer. PEI was experienced as a major stressor, beyond inadequate and uncertain access to essential resources such as food, via greater exposure to violence, pollution, and barriers to healthcare. Our findings suggest that attention should be paid to PEI in generating chronic stress, as a key facet of structural violence.



Immigration concerns for family and maternal health vulnerabilities

Anamaria Solis, Kyle Steven Wiley, Carina Heckert

Department of Sociology and Anthropology, the University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX

Preeclampsia and gestational diabetes are significant contributing factors to maternal morbidity and mortality in the United States. Utilizing a local biologies perspective with a focus on syndemics, this analysis explores how immigration-related social vulnerabilities may contribute to the high and increasing prevalence rates of preeclampsia and gestational diabetes among Latinas. Past research has shown that these conditions are related to biosocial processes, highlighting a need to better understand the role of social vulnerabilities in the clinical manifestation of these pregnancy complications. Drawing from a study of 176 pregnant Latina border residents utilizing publicly funded prenatal care, this analysis uses medical records, survey responses, and in-depth interviews to explore social vulnerabilities related to gestational diabetes and preeclampsia. The sample had a 24.9% prevalence rate of preeclampsia, compared to the national rate of approximately 5%, and a 24.9% prevalence rate of gestational diabetes, compared to the national rate of approximately 8.3%. A subset of interview data from participants who were US citizens shows how the effect of restrictive immigration policies and concerns over close family members contributed to social vulnerabilities. Survey data including the Kessler-10 emotional distress scale further emphasizes how pervasive feelings of distress for this subgroup were, as individuals who were concerned about the immigration status of immediate family members had higher levels of emotional distress (b = 3.27, p-value = 0.036). These findings emphasize the significant health effects of immigration policies, beyond concerns for one’s own immigration status, and the wide-reaching impact of immigration policies on borderland residents.



Inflammation and energy status among Daasanach pastoralists

Anna Tavormina1, Amanda McGrosky2, Kedir Teji Roba3, Hannah Jacobson4, Nicole Bobbie3, Grace Khosi5, Suha Arshad6, Natalie Meriwether3, Elena Hinz2, Srishti Sadhir2, Matthew Douglass7, Rosemary Nzunza8, David Braun9, Emmanuel Ndiema5, Zane Swanson2, Samuel Urlacher10, Asher Rosinger3,11, Herman Pontzer2

1Global Health Institute, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA; 2Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA; 3Department of Biobehavioral Health Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA; 4Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Evanston IL USA; 5Department of Earth Sciences, National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya; 6Department of Anthropology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA; 7University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE, USA; 8Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), Nairobi, Kenya; 9Center for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology, Department of Anthropology, The George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA; 10Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, TX, USA; 11Department of Anthropology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA

Chronic inflammation is thought to be both energetically costly and damaging to long-term health. We investigated the relationship between C-reactive protein (CRP), measured from dried blood spots, and energy status, assessed from body weight, body fat, and body mass index (BMI), among Daasanach semi-nomadic pastoralist adults in northern Kenya. Anthropometric data including height, body mass, and body fat (measured using bioelectric impedance), along with CRP (assayed from dried blood spots), were analyzed for n = 136 Daasanach adults (age ≥ 18 years) surveyed in 2019. Median (Q1, Q3) CRP was 0.94 mg/dL (0.34 mg/dL, 2.53 mg/dL). We used a linear model to assess the relationship between body mass index (BMI) and natural log-transformed CRP, controlling for age and sex, and found no relationship between BMI and log(CRP) (β = 0.051; 95% CI: -0.074 – 0.176)., body fat percentage was significantly positively associated with log(CRP) (β = 0.049; 95% CI: 0.007 – 0.091). Results support the hypothesis that energy status, and specifically caloric reserves in the form of body fat, are required to sustain elevated immune activation. These findings contribute to a growing body of literature examining the etiology and epidemiology of chronic inflammation, suggesting that excess energetic availability may be permissive of elevated immune activation, with broad implications for human health and disease.

Funding: The National Science Foundation (NSF REU #1852406; NSF CNH2-S #1924322) funded this work.



CRP and Health Predictors in Indigenous Quechua Women

Gracie Mae Cherye Turner1, Rocio Chavez Cabello2, Violeta Rojas Bravo3, Amanda Veile1

1Department of Anthropology, Purdue University, West Lafayette IN; 2Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Nacional Hermilio Valdizán, Huánuco, Perú; 3Facultad de Enfermería, Universidad Nacional Hermilio Valdizán, Huánuco, Perú

C-Reactive Protein (CRP), a biomarker of inflammation, varies by population, environment, and sex. Understanding CRP variability is essential for identifying factors affecting inflammation and disease risk. This pilot study measured CRP in Quechua women from a Peruvian highland farming community. Here we explored demographic/socioeconomic predictors of CRP and its associations with health variables. Data was collected from 50 participants (anthropometry. blood pressure (BP), and interviews regarding demographic, socioeconomic, and dietary factors). Blood samples were collected via finger-prick, and stored, transferred, and analyzed using standard laboratory protocols. Due to missing information, 43 samples were retained in statistical analyses. CRP levels ranged from 0.077-2.440 mg/L (median = 0.206 mg/L, confidence interval 0.271- 0.601), all within the normal range (<3 mg/L). Age, socioeconomic status, education, household crowding, and weekly meat consumption did not predict CRP. Weekly fish consumption showed a weak U-shaped association with CRP (r=0.24), with lowest CRP at intermediate intakes. BMI exhibited a moderate, inverted U-shaped association (r=0.50), with CRP peaking at intermediate BMIs. BP showed a weak U-shaped association (r=0.21 systolic, r=0.24 diastolic), with CRP highest at intermediate BPs. In conclusion, CRP was low, consistent with other Andean communities, perhaps due to long-term adaptations to high-altitude environments. Moderate and weak associations between CRP and BMI, and CRP and BP (respectively) are non-linear, suggesting that other physiological factors may modulate CRP levels. These findings underscore the importance of population-specific research to understand environmental and lifestyle influences on CRP variability and inflammation-related health risks.



Physiological pathways to health and substance use among people experiencing housing insecurity in Oregon

Allissa L. Van Steenis1,2, Elizabeth A. Shirtcliff1, Mackenzie Ní Flainn2, Zachary L. DuBoise2, Jo L. Weaver3, Josh J. Snodgrass2

1Center for Translational Neuroscience, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR; 2Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR; 3Department of Global Studies, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR

Housing insecurity is stressful and harms health and well-being. Illicit substance use, though stigmatized, is often described as “self-medication” among people experiencing houselessness (PEH). It is unclear, however, if substance use exacerbates or mitigates health issues for PEH. This analysis explores how substance use is related to physiological health among PEH.

Data were collected from 86 PEH, ages 20-74 (M=49.5, SD=12) years with 79% self-identifying as men. Data collection occurred at a local park and service center emphasizing community-defined ethical procedures. Biomarker data were normalized (final N=52) and analyzed using Principal Component Analysis.

Five factors emerged: Factor 1 (23.5%): highest factor loadings for systolic (.933) and diastolic (.891) blood pressure. Factor 2 (17.6%): total cholesterol (.965) and LDL (.867). Factor 3 (14.0%): hemoglobin (.720), HDL (-.769), and triglycerides (.690). Factor 4 (11.2%): glucose (.727), HBA1c (.756), and cortisol (.632). Factor 5 (10.1%): heart rate (.901). Factor 2 was correlated with use of cannabis (-.357, p = .010) and stimulants (-.312, p = .044). Alcohol use was correlated with Factor 3 (-.370, p = .007) and Factor 5 (-.426, p = .002). Hallucinogenic use was correlated with Factor 3 (-.457, p = .003).

These results suggest that substance use within PEH may support certain facets of health. This counterintuitive finding suggests that expectations of health harms from substance use should be tempered by context-specific considerations, especially for populations with limited access to healthcare who may use substances to manage physical and psychological symptoms.

Funding Source: NSF (BCS-2317286).



Maternal nutritional status, breastfeeding practices and child health among Guatemalan Maya and non-Maya children

Maria Ines Varela-Silva, Miya Edwards, Alice Irving

School of Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences, Loughborough University, United Kingdom

Rationale: Guatemala has long faced high levels of child undernutrition, particularly among indigenous populations. Breastfeeding practices and maternal nutritional status are key factors influencing children's nutritional outcomes. The relationship between breastfeeding, maternal anthropometry, and childhood nutritional status is not linear and varies according to indigenous status (Maya/non-Maya).

Methods: We analysed data from 10,367 mothers-child dyads, retrieved from the 2015 Guatemala Demographic Health Survey (DHS). Predictor variables included breastfeeding frequency and duration, and maternal nutritional status assessed via anthropometric measures. Covariates included indigenous status, maternal education, marital status, language spoken at home, and wealth index. The outcome variables measured were child stunting, wasting, underweight, and anaemia.

Results: Prolonged breastfeeding was linked to an increased likelihood of stunting in Maya children but a decreased likelihood among non-Maya children. Being Maya increased the odds of childhood stunting and underweight but reduced the likelihood of wasting. Maternal stunting was directly associated with child stunting and underweight, whilst maternal BMI was significantly associated to child wasting. Maya children faced a higher risk of stunting when mothers reported a lower wealth index, a larger household size, lower education levels, and moderate anaemia.

Conclusion: Maternal anthropometric characteristics and breastfeeding practices have a significant impact on child nutritional status in Guatemala, with the Maya population facing higher risks for adverse outcomes.



Border-community related stress and psychological distress during pregnancy among Latinas living at the United States-Mexico Border

Kyle Steven Wiley1, Anamaria Solis1, Sireesha Reddy2, Carina Heckert1

1Department of Sociology and Anthropology, the University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX; 2Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso, TX

Border-related socioenvironmental stressors may exert unique influences on the health of communities living along the United States (US)-Mexico border. In this project, we investigated how social, cultural, and immigration-related stressors were associated with psychological distress and self-reported mental and physical health in a cohort of pregnant Latinas living in El Paso, Texas. We conducted interviews with 176 Latinas receiving publicly funded prenatal care (2020-22). The Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K10) was used to assess psychological well-being, and participants were asked to self-report their overall physical and mental health on a five-point Likert scale. We used the Border Community and Immigration Stress Scale (BCISS) scale to assess social, cultural, and immigration-related stressors frequently experienced in border communities. We tested for associations between BCISS scores and health using linear regressions, adjusting for covariates including maternal age, parity, country of birth, and gestational age at interview. Lifetime BCISS scores adjusted for severity were the most strongly associated with maternal distress levels (b=2.12, p-value≤0.001), followed by the number of events experienced within the previous three months (b=1.50, p-value≤0.001). A similar pattern was found for self-reported mental health but not physical health. While participants born in Mexico had lower K10 scores, country of birth did not moderate the association between BCISS scores and psychological distress (p-value≥0.05). Our results suggest that stressors commonly experienced in border communities may exert unique effects on the burden of psychological distress experienced during pregnancy among Latinas living at the US-Mexico border.



Community-Level Economic Inequality and Metabolic Health: A Hierarchical Regression Approach

Adriana Wisniewski1,2, Alicia M DeLouize3, J Josh Snodgrass3,4,5, Paul Kowal6, Nirmala Naidoo7, Srean Chhim8, Sauvuth Chin9, Heng Sopheab,10, Morgan K Hoke1,2, Linda Adair2,11, Amanda L Thompson1,2,11

1Department of Anthropology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC; 2Carolina Population Center, University North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC; 3Global Health Biomarker Lab, Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR; 4Center for Global Health, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR; 5Global Station for Indigenous Studies and Cultural Diversity, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan; 6Health Data Analytics Team, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia; 7Department of Information, Evidence and Research, World Health Organization (WHO), , Geneva, Switzerland; 8National Institute of Public Health, Phnom Penh, Cambodia; 9National Public Health Laboratory, National Institute of Public Health, Phnom Penh, Cambodia; 10School of Public Health, Phenom Penh, Cambodia; 11Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC

A global increase in the prevalence of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) has been attributed to population-level epidemiologic transitions; however, more research is needed to link regional social and economic changes to individual behaviors and health outcomes. Here, we assess the association between economic inequality and health outcomes within and between countries using data from the China Health and Nutrition Survey (n=1367) and the World Health Survey+ in Cambodia (n=5189). We conducted hierarchical regressions assessing relationships between biological variables (HbA1c, systolic blood pressure, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, triglycerides, and waist-to-height ratio) and demographic, social, and economic variables, including Gini index for household income at the community level in men and women.

At least one significant association between the biological measures and covariates was seen in all groups except HDL for Chinese women and Cambodian men. Education was significantly associated with multiple biological variables only in Chinese men. Marriage was significantly associated with multiple biological variables but varied throughout all models. Urban/rural location was significant for multiple biological variables for Chinese men and Cambodian men and women. Community-level household income inequality was only significantly associated with blood pressure in Chinese women.

Biological measurements of NCDs were found to be significantly associated with age, marriage, years of education, and urbanicity, while income inequality was only significantly associated with systolic blood pressure in Chinese women. These findings could have important implications for understanding how individual health is influenced by regional-level factors, especially in communities undergoing economic development.



Coping strategy or long-term adaptive response? Food sharing networks in a multi-ethnic Indigenous peri-urban community in the Brazilian Amazon

Harold M Wright, Barbara A Piperata, Sean S Downey

The Ohio State University, United States of America

The food security literature emphasizes household-level, monetary access to food. Yet, research shows that social access to food via sharing and exchange is also important. Studies on how social networks influence food access often characterize the practice as a short-term, coping mechanism in times of economic strain. However, a growing body of work argues that such networks may be a long-term food security strategy. To explore the role of social networks for securing food in this peri-urban Indigenous community we used the Brazilian Food Insecurity Scale (EBIA) to measure perceived food security and semi-structured name generator and interpreter interviews to measure egocentric networks contributing to subsistence activities. We used regression analysis to identify relationships between EBIA score and network measurements together with household demographic, dietary, and economic data. Results indicate increases in the network measures of eigenvector centrality (p≤0.01), a measure of each network actor’s prestige within the network, and total weighted network score (p≤ 0.01), which measures the weight of each actor’s incoming ties against the weight of their outgoing ties, are positively correlated with perceived food security. Additional regression analyses show that the independent variables of time of residence and network size and density are statistically significant. These findings indicate that multilayered, reciprocal food-sharing networks in urban environments can potentially lead to long-term, resilient means of access, particularly in marginalized, peripheral communities.



Application of non-destructive DNA extraction protocol and single-strand library preparation for kinship analysis

Shaelyn Lee Zimmerman, Shelby Rose Feirstein, Evan Sommer, Meradeth Snow

University of Montana, United States of America

Introduction: Ancient DNA (aDNA) is defined by properties that include age, environment, and chemical activity. The alterations to DNA’s molecular structure inhibits traditional amplification methods and induces sequencing error. Given that DNA degradation patterns are sample specific, analyzing these patterns increases the likelihood of successful sampling. Non-destructive methods, such as those utilizing cementum, tend to yield higher amounts of endogenous DNA compared to traditional destructive methods using dentine or pulp; however, the resulting extract is single-stranded DNA (ssDNA). While double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) methods are well established, ssDNA library preparation is less so, although it increases coverage and success in sequencing short fragments when coupled with the high throughput of Next Generation Sequencing.

Methods: This study utilizes a non-destructive aDNA extraction protocol created by Murdoch (2024) that combines the Essel (2023) and Dabney (2019) methods. Subsequently, the Kapp, et al. (2021) ssDNA Santa Cruz Reaction (SCR) library preparation protocol is used to optimize degraded DNA in teeth from both forensic and historical contexts. SCR employs directional splinted ligation to convert ssDNA into sequencing libraries via a single enzymatic reaction. This method is resource efficient and decreases the loss of unique molecules for analyses.

Results: Library sequencing statistics were run for quality control, quantitation, and the identification of error. Future steps will be taken to trace lineage with the goal of identification.

Discussion: This project aims to validate the aforementioned methods and emphasizes its potential benefits in using genetic genealogy for identifying missing and unidentified persons.



Neuropsychiatric sequelae of long COVID among adults: a cross-sectional study in Johannesburg, South Africa

Andrew Wooyoung Kim1,2, Someleze Swana2, Simiso Sokhela3, Samanta Tresha Lalla-Edward3, Ncomeka Manentsa3, Alexander Tsai4,5,6, Willem Daniel Francois Venter3

1Department of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley, United States of America; 2Wits/SAMRC Developmental Pathways for Health Research Unit, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa; 3Ezintsha, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa; 4Center for Global Health and Mongan Institute, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, United States; 5Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States; 6Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Growing research has underscored the elevated prevalence and burden of neuropsychiatric morbidity among adults living with long COVID. Scientists have suggested that the severity of acute SARS-CoV-2 infection may predict the prevalence and severity of neuropsychiatric symptoms in long COVID. While countries in the Global South have faced among the highest incidence rates and burden of COVID-19, little is known about the neuropsychiatric symptoms of long COVID in these regions, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. This study aimed to 1) compare the prevalence of long-term neuropsychiatric symptoms between acute COVID-19 infection groups; 2) estimate the associations between COVID-19 severity and long-term neuropsychiatric symptoms; and 3) determine the association between long COVID symptoms and neuropsychiatric symptoms. This observational study took place in Johannesburg, South Africa between August 2022 and July 2023. A total of 360 adults were categorised into one of four case groups based on their initial COVID-19 symptoms: asymptomatic, symptomatic, hospitalised, and a vaccinated control group. Prevalence rates of PTSD (21.1%) and somatic symptoms (23.2%) were elevated. Individuals with symptomatic COVID-19 exhibited the greatest neuropsychiatric morbidity out of all groups, exhibiting the highest levels of depression, suicidality, anxiety, PTSD, bipolar disorder, somatisation, and headaches. Acute COVID-19 severity was associated with worse symptoms of depression, somatisation, and physical fatigue. Severity of possible long COVID symptoms was directly associated with neuropsychiatric sequelae. These results call attention to the long-term neuropsychiatric sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection and early identification and management of emerging neuropsychiatric symptoms in high-risk COVID-19 survivors in South Africa.



 
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