51st Meeting of the
Human Biology Association
March 18-20, 2026 | Denver, CO, USA
Conference Agenda
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In-Person Poster Session
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Adverse childhood experiences, loneliness, and adult mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic in South Africa: An online, cross-sectional study 1Department of Anthropology, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA; 2SAMRC/Wits Developmental Pathways for Health Research Unit, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa During the COVID-19 pandemic, global levels of poor mental health increased, influenced by factors such as isolation due to lockdown measures and adverse childhood experiences (ACEs). Previous studies have reported that ACEs may increase perceptions of loneliness in adulthood, which may serve as a prospective risk factor for poor mental health. Guided by the developmental origins framework, this study investigated the association between ACEs and adult mental health symptoms (e.g., anxiety, depression, PTSD, bipolar disorder), and the potential mediating effect of loneliness in South Africa. This cross-sectional online study recruited 245 participants across South Africa, which included a series of surveys assessing their demographics, social experiences, mental health symptoms, and feelings of loneliness. All statistical analyses were conducted using regression analyses in R, and mediation analysis was conducted using a causal inference framework. Approximately 78% of participants reported experiencing at least one ACE. ACEs were significantly associated with all four mental health outcomes (p < 0.001). In all models, loneliness was a significant mediator between ACEs and poor mental health. These findings highlight that ACEs are a possible risk factor for adult loneliness, which in turn may shape poor mental health in adulthood. Our results highlight the role of early life experiences in shaping adult loneliness and mental health, and the importance of social and family support in mitigating poor psychological health. Furthermore, our results underscore childhood adversity as a public concern requiring systemic responses, including routine screening for ACEs and greater investments in public mental healthcare in South Africa. Pushing up ti plants: intersections between mortuary practice, religion, culture, and ecology in Tanna, Vanuatu 1University of New Mexico, United States of America; 2Independent Scholar; 3Rutgers University Death is a human universal; however, the ways it is conceptualized and ritualized vary significantly across time, space, and culture. In anthropology, death has been conceptualized differently across the subdisciplines. Cultural anthropology tends to emphasize variation in cultural and religious perceptions, experiences, and meanings of death, while bio-archaeological anthropology has tended to focus on conditions impacting deposition and decomposition of human remains, related health implications, and what burials reveal about social organization. Of course, death reflects many axes of human experience and social organization and is usefully theorized using a multi-sub-disciplinary lens. We utilize qualitative interviews addressing perceptions of health, ecology, death, dying, and community in Tanna, Vanuatu, where religious, infrastructural, and ecological change offer opportunities to explore how variation in religious and ecological environments impacts mortuary practices. We supplement these findings with community-wide quantitative data about religious affiliation, perceptions of death and community, funeral attendance, and GPS burial data. Analysis reveals i) community and religion are central features of the ni-Vanuatu deathscape, fostering high levels of cohesion surrounding death; ii) materials and symbols associated with death are grounded in traditional ecological knowledge (TEK); and iii) cultural and ecological understandings of health, dying, and death have been impacted by ongoing market transition. Results highlight the importance of interdisciplinary studies of death, as globalization continues to drive rapid change in social, economic, and physical landscapes across the world. Neural signatures of stress-adapted cognition: ERP evidence linking early life stress to socio-emotional processing 1Northwestern University, Chicago, IL; 2Harvard University, Boston, MA; 3University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC; 4Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA; 5University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL Child development research demonstrates that early life stress (ELS) can disrupt cognitive and emotional development, often framed as impairment. However, emerging perspectives suggest some stress-related changes may reflect adaptive recalibration of cognitive systems to match environmental demands. The stress-adapted cognition (SAC) model proposes that exposure to ELS during childhood may shape responses to environmental cues, potentially heightening vigilance and attention to threats in adverse contexts. We used electroencephalography (EEG) to test SAC predictions by examining how ELS influences rapid neural responses to emotional stimuli, potentially revealing patterns of brain activity that may reflect adaptive socioemotional processing. Children aged 5–6 years (n = 58; 48% female) completed the Emotional Interrupt Task with positive, negative, and neutral images while EEG data were collected. The Late Positive Potential (LPP), an event-related potential indexing emotional salience and attentional allocation, was scored during the 500–1000 ms window and averaged across occipital and parietal sites of maximal activity. ELS was operationalized as harshness and unpredictability, dimensions considered evolutionarily relevant indicators of stress. ELS variables included children’s experiences witnessing violence (M=0.229. SD=0.174), being a victim of violence (M=0.156, SD=0.161), an income to needs ratio (M=5.470, SD=4.292), and census block group data including personal crime risk (M=149.655, SD=4.292) and an area deprivation index (M=34.448, SD=21.071). These findings will contribute to an anthropological understanding of how children’s emotional attention systems are calibrated to their social and ecological environments and link ELS exposure to variation in neural processing Estrone, adiposity, and inflammation in minimally-invasive samples: A pilot study 1Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 2Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, Texas; 3Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 4Department of Anthropology, University of Missouri - Columbia, Columbia, MO; 5School of Medicine, Saint Louis University, St. Louis, MO; 6Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado - Colorado Springs, Colorado Springs, CO Estrone (E1), the dominant circulating estrogen in females after menopause, is associated with the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines in adipose tissues. Previous work assessing these relationships has largely relied on venous blood samples, which are invasive and challenging to collect in field settings. We therefore assessed the feasibility of collecting and analyzing minimally-invasive biological samples to test relationships between estrone, adiposity, and inflammation using pilot data collected in Southwestern Illinois as part of the Rural Embodiment and Community Health (REACH) Study. Saliva samples were collected via passive drool from 17 female participants and analyzed for E1 using a commercially-available salivary estrone ELISA kit. Participants also provided stool samples to measure fecal calprotectin (FC; a biomarker of intestinal inflammation) using a commercially-available ELISA kit. Linear regression with log-transformed E1 and FC concentrations tested 1) whether sociodemographic and body composition factors predict salivary estrone concentration and 2) whether salivary E1 concentration predicts FC concentration. Bootstrapping (BCa, 2000 reps) was used to assess uncertainty. In models adjusted for age and menopausal status (collected from survey responses), we found no significant associations for either relationship, although increased body fat (measured using a portable bioimpedance scale) was associated with a small, non-significant decrease in salivary estrone concentration (B = -0.0346; p = 0.70), and there was a non-significant association between salivary estrone and increased fecal calprotectin concentration (B = 0.3734; p = 0.67). Future analyses will investigate whether fecal estrone concentration is associated with biomarkers of intestinal and systemic inflammation. The Impact of Iron on Maternal Mental Health: A Causal Analysis Using Directed Acyclic Graphs 1Binghamton University (SUNY), United States of America; 2MRCG@LSHTM, The Gambia; 3London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine; 4University of Connecticut; 5Brunel University; 6Pennsylvania State University; 7Baylor University The mental health of mothers is a growing area of concern for global public health. One risk factor for poor mental health is iron status, which has been tentatively but not causally associated with mental health in non-industrialized populations. We generate a Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) to test the causal impact of iron status (hemoglobin, soluble transferrin receptor (STFR), anemia status, iron deficiency status) on the mental health of 227 mothers (aged 19–47y) in The Gambia. Mental health was measured in two ways: the Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K6) and the Cantril Ladder. Overall, 56% of women were anemic (hemoglobin range: 6.1–15.3 g/dL) and STFR values were available for 50% of mothers (mean: 3.52 mg/L, sd: 2.31). Cantril scores ranged from the lowest satisfaction value of 1 to the highest of 10 (mean: 6.42, sd: 2.21), while K6 scores ranged from a low of 0 (no psychological distress) to 14 out of a possible 24, a constriction of scores that has been noted in other sub-Saharan populations. None of the models showed strong or statistically significant associations between iron measures and the mental health scales. This analysis does not support a causal relationship between iron status and maternal mental health in this population. However, food insecurity was significantly associated with mental health in all K6 models. Food insecurity may act as a general psychological stressor that worsens mental health, but perhaps not through the pathway. Further research should consider the relationship between food insecurity and mental health. Perceptions of “good mothering” among university-aged women in upstate New York, US, and Xalapa, Mexico. 1Department of Anthropology, State University of New York Oneonta, New York, United States of America; 2Instituto de Investigaciones Psicológicas, Universidad Veracruzana, Xalapa, Mexico “Good mothering” is a goal at once seductive, ever-changing and challenging to achieve. Culturally specific constructions of “good” and “bad” practices of infant care can lead women to engage in risky infant care behaviours unknowingly and to discount beneficial practices, while failure to meet cultural standards may jeopardise maternal mental health. This project investigates the perceptions of mothering and infant care practices held by university-aged women in two distinct cultural contexts, upstate New York, US, and Xalapa, Mexico. Five focus groups of 60-90 minutes duration were conducted in each location in March-October 2024, involving 27 women in New York and 33 women in Xalapa. Guiding questions about mothering and infant care provided structure to the discussions and standardised probes elicited additional responses. Participants in NY felt that breastfeeding enhances mother-infant bonding but remains socially taboo, while providing little benefit over breast milk substitutes. In contrast, participants in Xalapa discussed the immunological and nutritional benefits of breast milk. The high cost of breast milk substitutes was mentioned by participants in both contexts. NY participants viewed co-sleeping practices as inherently risky and solitary sleep as unproblematically safe, whereas close proximity sleep was normative for Xalapan participants. Family and community were seen as main sources of parenting support and information among participants in Xalapa. NY women identified family, but exposure to parenting-related content from social media was also mentioned repeatedly. Understanding perceptions of care practices among women who are the next generation of parents may help us to understand their infant care decision-making. Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) access in a pilot study among people experiencing homelessness in Oregon, USA 1Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon; 2Center for Translational Neuroscience, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon; 3Department of Microbiology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon; 4Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado Colorado Springs, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 5Department of Global Studies, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon; 6Global Station for Indigenous Studies and Cultural Diversity, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan People experiencing houselessness (PEH) in the United States often face difficulty accessing water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) resources. Despite being a global health priority and an integral component of social determinants of health (SDOH), WASH is rarely examined in high-income countries like the United States. Pilot data were collected in Summer 2025 on WASH and intestinal health as part of a mixed methods study in Oregon. Minimally invasive biomarkers, focus group discussions, and a brief survey were conducted among 38 PEH adults aged 21-67 years. According to participant self-report, 73% had used the bathroom outside in the previous month, 34% reported that outdoors is their primary bathroom location, 63% were able to access a shower for bathing once per week or less, 26% relied on service providers as their primary source of water, and 45% had utilized a river or lake for bathing within the prior month. These findings highlight a critical gap in WASH access for the study participants. For PEH, SDOH play an outsized role in the ability to live, and service providers play an important role in addressing these crises experienced by PEH. This preliminary study demonstrates an urgent need for immediate and targeted interventions to provide safe WASH facilities for PEH in the United States. Assessing Self-Reported Physical Activity as a Predictor of Lipid Biomarkers in a Low-Resource Community from Southwestern Illinois 1Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 2Department of Anthropology, University of Missouri - Columbia, Columbia, MO; 3Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, Texas; 4Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 5Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado Colorado Springs, Colorado Springs, CO; 6St. Louis University School of Medicine– St. Louis, MO Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death in the U.S. and is associated with higher levels of total cholesterol while lower levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) are generally linked with reduced CVD risk. Physical activity (PA) is thought to be positively associated with HDL-C and inversely related to total cholesterol. We proposed that within a low-resource community with limited access to spaces for recreation and fitness, PA would be significantly associated with cholesterol levels. Survey data and finger-prick blood samples were collected from adults (n=86, ages 20-92) in Southwestern Illinois as part of the Rural Embodiment and Community Health (REACH) Study. The amount of moderate to vigorous PA performed in a typical week was reported by participants while lipid biomarkers levels were measured using a CardioChek Plus analyzer. Logistic regression models tested associations between self-reported PA and healthy levels of total cholesterol or HDL-C (as defined by the CDC), controlling for age, sex, race, income, and cholesterol medication usage. No significant association was found between PA and total cholesterol or HDL-C. Greater odds of healthy total cholesterol levels were predicted by younger age (p=.049) and cholesterol medication usage (p=.007) Higher BMI was associated with lower odds of healthy HDL-C levels (p =.029). It is possible that self-reported PA data may not be reliable for predicting cholesterol levels. Future analyses will assess more objective measures of activity (i.e., accelerometry data) and additional biomarkers linked with CVD (i.e. C-reactive protein). Identifying social determinants of health and barriers to diabetes management in individuals with diabetes or prediabetes in the Galapagos Islands, Ecuador 1Department of Anthropology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America; 2Department of Biostatistics, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America; 3Department of Statistics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America; 4Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America; 5Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America; 6Colegio de Ciencias Biológicas y Ambientales, Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Ecuador; 7Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America Non-communicable diseases, including diabetes, have recently emerged as the leading cause of mortality in Ecuador. Previous research from the Galapagos Islands identified lack of access to affordable foods, medications, and care as barriers to diabetes self-management. We conducted a mixed-methods pilot study with individuals diagnosed with diabetes or prediabetes (n=25) living on San Cristobal Island in July 2025 to explore barriers to effective self-management and assess how access to water, food, medication, and healthcare, as well as, social support networks impact health outcomes and the emotional burden of living with diabetes. The survey included sociodemographic, water and food security, healthcare access, and health history questions. Additionally, a semi-structured interview on challenges of living with diabetes was conducted. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and thematic analyses of interviews to characterize lived experiences of those with diabetes. Most participants reported a single basic Ecuadorian household salary or below (68%), water insecurity (80%), and food insecurity (56%). The mean HbA1c value in participants was 8.18%. 60% had at least one family member diagnosed with or at risk of diabetes. 64% were taking diabetes medication. 72% of participants received diabetes care in Galapagos, where there is no medical diabetes specialist. Of those, 22% also received care from mainland Ecuador. Thematic analysis suggests that access to food, medication and care remain significant concerns. Our findings indicate that living with diabetes poses a significant emotional burden, and many individuals expressed a strong interest in connecting with others who live with diabetes. Mapping endocrine vulnerability: spatial patterns of parathyroid hormone disruption and environmental inequality in the U.S. University of Kentucky, United States of America Environmental pollutants can disrupt endocrine function in ways that reflect and reinforce social inequities in exposure and health. Because calcium balance is central to metabolism, skeletal biology, and adaptation to ecological stressors, the parathyroid hormone (PTH) system offers a sensitive lens on how toxic exposures become biologically embodied. This study examines how exposures to lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), and mercury (Hg) influence PTH variation in U.S. adults and how these effects align with spatial patterns of environmental injustice. Individual-level data from NHANES 2005–2006 (n = 4,128) were analyzed using survey-weighted linear regression to estimate associations between blood metals and serum PTH. To situate these physiological results, county-level socioeconomic and environmental data from the 2022 Environmental Justice Index were mapped and compared with modeled patterns of endocrine vulnerability. At the individual level, metals showed distinct associations with PTH: Pb was positively associated, whereas Cd and Hg were inversely associated (all p < 0.01). Counties with higher environmental-burden scores showed overlapping geographic patterns with elevated modeled PTH and pronounced socioeconomic disadvantage. These findings suggest that toxic metal exposures alter calcium–PTH regulation at the individual level while clustering spatially in communities facing cumulative social and environmental stressors. Integrating physiological, environmental, and socioeconomic data reveals how endocrine function embodies both biochemical disruption and structural inequality. Does self-perception of social standing impact your health? Evaluating subjective social status and epigenetic age acceleration in Cebu 1Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, United States of America; 2USC-Office of Population Studies Foundation, University of San Carlos, Philippines; 3Department of Medical Genetics, University of British Columbia, Canada; 4Centre for Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics, Canada Socioeconomic status (SES) has well-documented influences on health across the life-course, however, little attention has been given to subjective social status (SSS). Unlike SES, SSS measures personal perception of one’s social standing rather than material wealth. Because of SSS’s focus on self-perception, it offers unique insights into how complex psychosocial factors may impact health and aging— information that cannot be captured through SES alone. The pathways through which psychosocial stressors like SSS impact health and aging are largely uncertain, though DNA methylation has gained popularity as a proxy measure for biological changes that influence overall health and senescence pace. In particular, epigenetic clocks, which use patterns of DNA methylation to estimate age, have gained popularity as a means to search for biological age acceleration in response to chronic stressors. Here we use blood-derived whole genome methylation data from the Cebu Longitudinal Health and Nutrition Survey (CLHNS) to analyze epigenetic clock estimates in relation to SSS. For our analysis, we used sex-stratified multivariable linear regressions with clock estimates regressed on SSS and chronological age. In males, no clocks were predicted by SSS. However, in females lower SSS significantly or borderline significantly predicted higher epigenetic age in the Hannum (𝛽 = -0.119, p = 0.056), Phenoage (𝛽 = -0.247, p = 0.01), Grimage (𝛽 = -0.078, p = 0.087), and DunedinPACE (𝛽 = -0.006, p = 0.017) clocks. These findings suggest SSS has an effect on DNA methylation patterns amongst women in Cebu and may potentially have a larger impact on health and aging. Chronic disease, acute onset: a qualitative study of cardiometabolic disease in rural Yucatán 1Santa Clara University, United States of America; 2Universidad de Oriente, Yucatan, Mexico The prevalence of cardiometabolic (CM) diseases is rising dramatically across Mexico, with the Yucatán Peninsula experiencing some of the nation's steepest increases in conditions like diabetes, hypertension, and obesity. Existing regional research has focused primarily on urban centers or minors, leaving a critical data gap in rural adult populations which this study addresses by examining local understandings of chronic disease. We employed qualitative methods, including focus groups and individual interviews (n=30), with residents from a community near Valladolid, Yucatán, to explore their conceptualizations of CM disease development and the societal factors that impede prevention and treatment. Participants expressed profound concern over the high prevalence of CM conditions. Our key qualitative finding reveals a significant disjunction: despite acknowledging the long-term role of diet and exercise in management, community members primarily conceptualize CM conditions as having an acute, identifiable point of onset rather than a gradual, chronic process. Participants cited profound systemic and environmental barriers to effective management, including inconsistent medical attention, lack of transportation to larger towns, shortages of public health system medications, and the prohibitive cost of private care. They consistently advocated for enhanced local healthcare access and workshops tailored to chronic disease management. These findings underscore that future research and public health interventions must incorporate these local conceptualizations of acute-onset disease. Understanding this perspective is imperative for developing synergistic, culturally tailored approaches aimed at prevention and ensuring that structural impediments to long-term chronic management are prioritized in rural communities. Vulnerable males: maternal birth weight has sex specific associations with infant birth weight in the CLHNS Washington University in St. Louis, United States of America The CLHNS is a longitudinal, multi-generational cohort study of three generations of Filipinos from Cebu, Philippines. The CLHNS enrolled more than 3000 births in 1983 and 1984, and more than 1000 births among female infants from the original cohort. Initially focused on infant feeding patterns, the study is now a long running study of developmental programming, aging, and intergenerational health. Kuzawa and Eisenberg reported that birth weight was correlated between mothers and offspring in the CLHNS. Here, we expand this analysis to look at sex-specific trends in birth weight and postnatal growth. We hypothesized that there would be different associations between maternal birth weight and infant birth weight based on infant sex. A total of 765 mother-infant pairs from these pairs had complete data from 1983-2009. Data were analyzed using linear regression. A subset of participants (n=126) had at least one infant growth measurement. Female infants had a mean birth weight 99.22 grams higher than male infants among mothers in the low-birth-weight category, though not statistically significant (95% CI: -176.65 to 375.09 grams, p= 0.48). Male infants of low-birth-weight mothers had significantly lower mean birth weight compared to male infants of average birth weight mothers. No differences were found between female infant birth weights between maternal birth weight groups. Male infants of low birth weight mothers, regardless of birth size, had less weight gain in the first year of life. Within this sample, it appears that male infants of low birth weight mothers have differential fetal and neonatal growth patterns. Relationship between geographical slope and child health in Lima, Peru University of Massachusetts - Amherst, United States of America Cities are heterogeneous environments, linked to the uneven distribution and development of infrastructure and public services. Irregular urbanization enhances and produces different health risks, including uneven exposure to disease. We build on human biology’s long history of exploring community-level variables that contribute to health by exploring city geography and its relationship to child health status using geographical information systems (GIS) for home locations for 102 Peruvian children. Specifically, we investigated slope and its association with a variety of household-level variables and child health measures by analyzing spatial trends of slope across all locations. Kernel Density analysis was used to find potential areas where certain variables were concentrated while Inverse Distance Weighted (IDW) interpolation was used to visualize the general trend of variables across all locations. Analyses suggest that slope is not correlated with anemia status, height-for-age or weight-for-age z-scores, or the presence of respiratory and diarrheal disease symptoms. However, c-reactive protein (CRP) level and the amount of money spent on food (both weekly and when eating outside the home) increased with steeper slope (all r:>0.40). Generally, as slope increased the probability of poor-quality house materials increased (r:0.11) and patterns also suggest that child BMI z-scores were lower in steeper slope areas (r: -0.05). This analysis highlights the potential of including spatial analyses in research exploring physical and social environmental variables that impact health status, particularly in peri-urban areas characterized by heterogeneous access to infrastructure and services. Body mass index, body temperature and sleep among Akwesasne women 1Department of Anthropology, State University of New York at Albany, Albany, NY; 2Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, State University of New York at Albany, Albany, NY; 3Center for the Elimination of Minority Health Disparities, State University of New York at Albany, Albany, NY Sleep and thermoregulation are closely linked physiological processes that can reflect underlying metabolic status. Prior research suggests that inefficient sleep is associated with metabolic dysregulation, altered thermoregulation, and higher body mass index (BMI). This study examines associations between sleep, body temperature, and BMI in women from the Akwesasne Mohawk Nation who participated in the RAWBS Study (n=165). Participants were recruited and data collected between 2009 and 2016. Sleep characteristics were assessed using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), focusing on component scores for sleep efficiency, duration, and quality. Basal body temperatures were used to calculate individual mean values, and BMI served as an index of metabolic status. Spearman’s rank correlations examined relationships between mean body temperature, BMI, and PSQI components. Analyses included all participants with temperature data (n=165), and subsets with at least 20 (n=159) and 28 (n=120) valid temperature measures to evaluate completeness effects. Mean body temperature correlated positively with subjective sleep quality (ρ = 0.15-0.20, p ≤ .05) but not with duration or efficiency. BMI showed weak, nonsignificant negative trends with temperature (ρ ≈ -0.12 to -0.15) and sleep measures. These findings indicate that warmer basal body temperature is modestly associated with better perceived sleep quality among reproductive-age women. Sleep duration and efficiency were unrelated to temperature, suggesting that quantitative aspects of sleep may be less closely linked to thermoregulation in this sample. Household composition and adult nutritional status among BaYaka foragers in the Republic of the Congo 1University of Notre Dame, United States of America; 2Georgia State University, United States of America; 3Durham University, United Kingdom Humans have family structures involving stacked dependency periods for offspring who grow slowly and require substantial energy investment. Across cultures, humans cooperate extensively to raise these costly offspring, with mothers receiving support from fathers, grandmothers, and other kin and community members. Cooperative partners may help parents mitigate nutritional stress related to caregiving costs in energetically demanding ecologies. Our prior work in this BaYaka community showed that women often cooperate with other women, particularly kin, in food sharing, which may reflect the support needed to alleviate the energetic costs of reproduction and childcare. In this study, we investigated associations between household composition and two anthropometric measurements associated with nutrition status (body mass index (BMI) and triceps skinfold thickness) among reproductive-aged men and women (N=101; <60 years) from a BaYaka foraging community, which is part of a smaller-scale foraging society in the Republic of the Congo. Adults without a spouse in their household had significantly lower BMI (p<0.05) than those whose spouse lived in the same household. These results were similar for women and men. Triceps skinfold thickness in both women and men did not significantly differ according to whether they lived with a spouse (p>0.9). Adults’ anthropometrics also did not significantly vary based on whether they resided with their own mothers or mothers-in-law (‘grandmothers’) (p>0.2) or the number of other female or male adults residing in the household (p>0.1). These findings suggest that spousal co-residence may help buffer adults’ long-term energetic condition, possibly through greater consistency in subsistence and resource pooling. Association between years since menopause, metabolic syndrome, and cognitive function in rural South African adults 1Department of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley; 2Health Economics and Epidemiology Research Office (HE²RO), University of the Witwatersrand; 3SAMRC/Wits Developmental Pathways for Health Research Unit, University of the Witwatersrand The menopausal transition is recognized as a significant determinant of long-term health during the postreproductive period. However, while ovarian and chronological aging may progress in parallel, they are distinct processes. Years since natural menopause (YSM) reflects reproductive aging that may influence cardiometabolic health and cognitive function in ways not captured by age alone. The association between postmenopausal aging and multi-domain health outcomes remains understudied in South Africa where expansion of healthcare and societal infrastructure has contributed to increased life expectancy and, consequently, prevalence of age-related conditions. This study examines the association between YSM (<10, 10–20, 20+ years) and metabolic syndrome (MetS) risk and cognitive function, respectively, among a cohort of postmenopausal adults (N = 878) in a rural South African setting. Adjusting for age, assets, nativity, parity, and social engagement, individuals more than 20 YSM exhibited a trend toward greater odds of MetS (Ref: <10 YSM; OR = 1.67, 95% CI: 0.96, 2.93); however, social engagement provided a significant protective effect (OR = 0.89, 95% CI: 0.80, 0.98). Additionally, in the adjusted model, those more than 20 YSM displayed significantly lower cognitive performance as captured by a standardized latent variable (Ref: <10 YSM; b = -0.28, 95% CI: -0.51, -0.05). These findings suggest that the physiological changes accompanying the menopausal transition may continue to influence health decades later, particularly cognitive domains. These findings may help inform risk assessment and implementation of timely interventions to bolster cardiometabolic and cognitive health among postmenopausal individuals in the Global South. Blood pressure does not increase in response to menopause among forager-horticulturalists in the Bolivian Amazon 1Center for Evolution and Medicine, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona; 2Institute of Human Origins, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona; 3School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona; 4Integrative Anthropological Sciences, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California; 5Economic Science Institute, Chapman University, Orange, California; 6Department of Human Behavior, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany; 7Center for Economic and Social Research, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California; 8MemorialCare Heart & Vascular Institute, MemorialCare Health System, Fountain Valley, California; 9Division of Cardiology, University of California Irvine, Irvine, California; 10Saint Luke's Mid America Heart Institute, University of Missouri-Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri; 11Institute for Advanced Study, Toulouse School of Economics, Toulouse, France Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death for women globally, and the menopausal transition is associated with elevated cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Yet menopause’s impact on blood pressure remains inconclusive, with evidence largely based on data from industrialized populations. To address this gap, we examined associations between menopause, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and hypertension among the Tsimane, forager-horticulturalists, and a nationally representative U.S. population. We analyzed data from female and male Tsimane (nindividuals=5,713; nobservations=19,971; ages 15–93) and U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey participants (NHANES; nindividuals=9,657; ages 15–80). We applied linear regression models for systolic and diastolic blood pressure with menopause, logistic regression models for hypertension and stage 2 hypertension, interaction models to assess menopause-age effects on blood pressure trajectories, and estradiol mediation analyses. Neither blood pressure nor hypertension was associated with menopause among Tsimane or U.S. women. Tsimane women showed no change in blood pressure slope post-menopause. U.S. women exhibited an increase in systolic blood pressure with age post-menopause (b=0.208 mmHg/year, p<0.001) and a decline in diastolic slope post-menopause (b=-0.393 mmHg/year, p<0.001). Estradiol did not mediate effects among the Tsimane but had a modest indirect effect on systolic blood pressure among U.S. women (b=0.756 mmHg, p=0.022), though without a significant overall effect of menopause. We found no direct association between menopause and blood pressure in either population. However, U.S. women showed menopause-related changes in age trajectories of systolic and diastolic blood pressure, underscoring the influence of pre-menopause cardiovascular risk environments on post-menopause risk profiles. Linking perceived and measured water quality to coping behaviors and psychosocial stress in San Cristóbal, Galápagos Islands 1Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America; 2Department of Anthropology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America; 3Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America; 4Colegio de Ciencias Biológicas y Ambientales, Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Ecuador; 5Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America Reliable access to clean water remains a major health and environmental challenge in the Galapagos Islands. Residents facing water insecurity cope with biologically contaminated water and the psychosocial stress of unreliable access. Using data from a mixed-methods pilot study conducted in July 2025 to assess perceived and measured water quality on San Cristobal Island, we explored the relationships between perceived and measured water quality and the patterns of coping behaviors and psychosocial stress. Participants from 21 households completed a survey and semi-structured interview about perceptions of water quality, household water use practices, coping behaviors, and water-related stress. Additionally, samples of tap and drinking water were collected and tested for Escherichia coli. Results show divergence between perceived and measured drinking water quality: 33% of households perceived their water as contaminated despite microbiologically safe results, while 24% perceived their water as clean despite E. coli contamination of any level. Perceived water quality was also related to both coping behavior and psychosocial stress: just over half (52%) of households reported coping strategies - such as prioritizing specific water tasks or seeking alternative water sources - regardless of actual contamination. Additionally, 38% of households reported stress or coping behavior despite safe water, while 19% experienced contaminated water but did not report stress or coping. Findings suggest that water insecurity in the Galápagos is not defined by microbial contamination alone. Psychosocial stress and coping behavior often emerge independently of measured contamination, highlighting the broader burdens of water insecurity. Private religious practice, but not public religious practice, and marital status are associated with change in cognitive function in a longitudinal sample of older adults 1Anthropology Program; Utah State University; 2Department of Psychology; Utah State University Background: Religious involvement is positively correlated with cognition while widowhood has been associated with cognitive decline among older adults. Further, religious involvement mitigates the negative impact(s) of losing a spouse for some. We examined whether religious involvement, marital status, and/or their interaction were associated with cognition among older adults. Methods: The baseline sample (N=2469, 58% female; age=76.52 [5.96]) included participants from the Cache County Study on Memory in Aging. Linear mixed-effects models examined associations between cognition and marital status and religion for a maximum of 8.22 years. Co-variates included activities of daily living (ADLs), health, age, and education. A modified Mini-Mental State Examination (3MS) measured cognition; religion was organized into two domains (public practice, private practice). Marital status was classified as married, widowed, or single/divorced/separated. Results: Private religious practice was positively associated with cognition (β=0.668, p<.001). Marital status significantly interacted with time such that being single/divorced/separated was associated with more rapid cognitive decline compared to being widowed or married (ps=.052, .001). Public religious practice and interactions between religion and marital status were not associated with cognition. Discussion: This analysis identifies a specific component of religion, private practice (e.g., private prayer), that may be protective against cognitive decline in a longitudinal sample. This finding contrasts past work that identified an association between attending religious services and cognition but did not control for participants’ health or ADL status. The present results also suggest that being single/separated/divorced is related to cognition, highlighting the need to examine marital categories beyond a divorced/widowed binary. Connections Between Food Cravings and Nutritional Deficiencies Florida State University, United States of America Food cravings are a universal experience that influences factors such as weight, diet choice, and health, yet their nutritional and biological mechanisms remain poorly understood. This project examined the relationship between nutritional deficiencies and food cravings among 19 students at Florida State University using 24 hour dietary recalls and structured interviews. Participants (mean age=20.1 years, 74% women) reported what foods they crave, which were then categorized as protein, sugar, fat, or salt. 24 hour food recalls were analyzed using the Nutrition Data System for Research (NDSR), and four independent t-tests compared the mean nutrient intake between participants who reported specific cravings and those who did not express these cravings for sodium, magnesium, iron, and protein. No significant associations were found between specific cravings and lower nutrient intake (p > 0.05 for tests). Participants expressing cravings did not exhibit corresponding deficiencies; for example, all consumed sodium levels were higher than the daily recommended amount (2300 mg). Deficiencies in magnesium (85% of participants) and iron (63% of participants) were observed but not related to reported cravings. The findings in this study suggest that food cravings may not be reliable indicators of underlying nutritional deficiencies. Cravings may be more closely tied to environmental or psychological factors. Future directions can investigate the behavioral and emotional dimensions of cravings, such as comfort and nostalgia, in addition to the role of childhood or current food insecurity. Examining heat-related health risk and menopause status in urban environments: A meta-analysis from Philadelphia 1University of Pennsylvania, United States of America; 2Department of Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19103; 3Environmental Innovations Initiative, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19103 Extreme heat, intensified by climate change and urbanization, poses a significant public health threat. Menopausal individuals may face heightened vulnerability under heat stress due to endocrine changes affecting thermoregulation. However, urban heat studies and interventions rarely focus on menopausal populations directly. Over the past 20 years, Philadelphia has faced increasingly frequent and intense heat events, driven by climate change and its pronounced urban heat island landscape. This has prompted the development of notable sustained public health interventions such as the Heatline and cooling centers. Here, we conducted a review of existing literature related to heat, stress, and health and the city of Philadelphia. We systematically searched PubMed and Web of Science (1996-2025) for original research articles using keywords “heat”, “health”, and “Philadelphia.” Thirty-seven articles met the inclusion criteria. We found that while zero articles included menopause as a variable, 81% included age and 46% included sex/gender. Among these, 72.2% found increased age correlated with higher heat-health risk, and 10.8% identified increased risk for females/women. Crucially, 100% of the latter found this risk exclusively in older females. Our findings reveal a critical gap in the Philadelphia existing interventions and overall literature regarding explicit examination of menopausal status and relevant health effects due to heat stress. Simultaneously, existing work strongly implicates older females as a high-risk group. Given that local research has directly informed interventions for other vulnerable populations, future urban heat-health studies must directly incorporate menopausal status to ensure public health strategies address this likely vulnerable demographic. Adrenal puberty and mucosal immunity among juveniles and adolescents in Utila, Honduras 1Boston University, United States of America; 2Notre Dame University; 3Washington State University; 4Nipissing University Life history theory suggests that nutritional and disease ecology affects the timing of puberty, and that trade-offs between life history demands are especially acute in resource-limited populations. Although this is assumed to apply to both adrenal and gonadal puberty, few studies have examined trade-offs affecting adrenal maturation. Following life history theory, it is predicted that those with greater energy budgets will show accelerated adrenal puberty. Further, controlling for differences in overall energy budget, those with a heavier immune load should show diminished investment in adrenal androgen levels. To test these hypotheses, salivary dehydroepiandrosterone-sulfate (as a measure of adrenal maturation; DHEA-S), body fat percentage, and a measure of mucosal immunity (i.e. secretory IgA; sIgA) were measured in a group of Honduran juveniles and adolescents (96 males and 126 females) aged 7 to 18. Multiple regression analysis showed that DHEA-S was significantly associated with higher mucosal immunity (β = 0.51), greater age (β = 0.19), and female gender (β = 0.16). Body fat percentage was not associated with DHEA-S. Results are discussed in light of potential developmental functions of DHEA-S. Contextualizing exposure to perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in household water in a small island community in Honduras 1Washington State University, United States of America; 2Department of Anthropology, Boston University, Boston, MA; 3Department of Anthropology, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN; 4Department of Psychology, Nipissing University, North Bay, ON Exposure to environmental endocrine disruptors such as perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) at the volume seen today is evolutionarily novel. To date, few studies have examined the cumulative exposure of PFAS and its downstream effect on short and long-term health outcomes, especially in children. A pilot study was conducted in January and February 2025 in Utila, Honduras in collaboration with the Utila Child Health Project. Twenty-one drinking and tap water samples were collected from households enrolled in the study and analyzed for 16 different PFAS compounds using LC/MS according to EPA Protocol 537.1. One groundwater sample from a neighborhood where residential flooding is common was also collected. The pilot study aimed to (1) measure the composition and concentration of PFAS in household water sources, (2) examine whether PFAS burden is associated with residential location and household water source type. We find that perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) and perfluorobutane sulfonate (PFBS) are the two most common contaminants. 52% of the samples demonstrated detectable levels of at least one PFAS compound with higher contamination present in households located near the town center. These findings indicate that PFAS are a relevant contaminant for both drinking water and household water in Utila, Honduras, particularly for children in vulnerable developmental stages. This pilot data will provide integral information for future work which will expand on this project by comparing children’s household exposure to PFAS with longitudinal health data from the Utila Child Health Project. “Three foods make a meal”: Rwandan grandmothers as keepers of nutritional knowledge amid changing foodways. 1Ohio University; 2University of Rwanda Globalization and economic shifts are transforming food systems across Africa, altering diets, ingredients, and family eating patterns. In Rwanda, grandmothers continue to play a central role in sustaining and transmitting traditional food knowledge. The aim of this pilot project is to explore how Rwandan grandmother’s understand nutrition, their role in transmitting traditional food knowledge, and perceived dietary quality of typical meals. Ethnographic fieldwork (March 2024) with 20 Rwandan grandmothers, aged 55-89, included qualitative interviews, focal-follow observations, free listing, and a cooking-based focus group. Data were analyzed using iterative, inductive coding supplemented by Smith’s S index for salience of traditional foods and FAO African food tables for nutrient estimates. Participants defined a good meal as combining three elements – body building foods (proteins, beans, meat, fish), protective foods (vegetables, greens, fruit), and energy- giving foods (cassava, sweet potatoes, bananas, sorghum). Beans are at the core of a traditional Rwandese diet, often cooked in a single pot with leafy greens and a starch. While meat was valued for celebrations, most daily meals were plant based, averaging 275 kcal, with 15 g protein, per 250 g serving. Grandmother’s cultural model of balanced eating aligns with nutritional science, highlighting the potential of grandmothers as a community educators and agents of adaptation during Rwanda’s ongoing nutrition transition. Gut microbiome-mediated phenotypic plasticity in human evolution and health Department of Anthropology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL Over the past decade, the gut microbiome has emerged as a key facilitator of human phenotypic plasticity. Our microbial symbionts serve as a rapidly evolving reservoir of genetic potential that can shift host biology in response to environmental and social change, enhancing the fit between humans and their environments. This capacity likely evolved among our Homo ancestors during periods of climatic instability and global expansion, when the ability to rapidly adjust physiology would have conferred strong adaptive advantages. A central mechanism through which this plasticity operates is energy regulation. Microbial metabolites influence how the body allocates and stores energy, shaping metabolism, immune function, and inflammation, systems that are critical to human survival and likely under strong selective pressure throughout our evolutionary history. By mediating these processes, the microbiome supports the host in navigating energetic trade-offs to maintain physiological stability across the lifecourse. Microbially mediated flexibility in growth, metabolism, and immune function ultimately shape human life history, reflecting a continual negotiation between energetic constraints and environmental or social inputs that influence health and wellbeing. In modern contexts of rapid ecological and lifestyle change, our microbial symbionts continue to modulate how human biology shifts in response to new forms of stress and instability. Understanding how microbiome-mediated plasticity functions today offers critical insight into the evolutionary foundation, and contemporary limits, of human adaptability, and how our microbial symbionts may help us meet the challenges of the future. Does social support improve health? A test using social networks and health in Vanuatu 1Department of Anthropology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA; 2Department of Linguistics, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA; 3Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA; 4Independent Scholar, Port Vila, Vanuatu; 5University of the South Pacific, Emalus Campus, Port Vila, Vanuatu; 6Department of Integrative Biology, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK, USA; 7Department of Anthropology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NY, USA; 8Department of Anthropology, Binghamton University (SUNY), Binghamton, NY, USA Human sociality is unparalleled among mammals and highly complex, including nested layers of interaction, support from kin and non-kin, and support within and across group boundaries. It is thus unsurprising that sociality is a key regulator of human health, with frameworks such as embodiment and social determinants of health underscoring how external social and cultural environments get “under the skin”. Operationalizing key features of social interaction that may impact health is still in its infancy. Social network analysis offers a powerful means of inspecting how various features of social embeddedness may map onto health. Further, while human behavioral ecology has shown links between social networks and reproductive success, especially for females, there are few papers demonstrating objectively links between health and measures of social networks. This undergraduate-led project investigates key features of social networks to explore whether and how cooperative ties map onto health. It analyzes social network and health data that were collected in the summer of 2024 within a small village on Tanna, Vanuatu, where community has long been emphasized as a key feature among other relational concepts of human existence. Although the sample size is small and results not significant, we find expected trends between greater social support and lower risk of hypertension when looking at support across a range of cooperative domains. These results offer tentative support for the importance of social support to human health and well-being. Blood pressure, nail cortisol, EBV antibody titers, and CRP among refugees from Serbia and Kenya 1Department of Anthropology, University of South Carolina, United States of America; 2Department of Anthropology, University of Notre Dame, United States of America; 3Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of Massachusetts- Amherst, United States of America; 4Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, United States of America; 5Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, United States of America; 6Eck Institute for Global Health, University of Notre Dame, United States of America Globally, 123.2 million people have been forcefully displaced, many facing adversities that result in chronic stress and trauma. Forced migration exposes individuals to chronic stressors that may impact both neuroendocrine and inflammatory systems, with potential effects on cardiovascular health. While variations in exposure to chronic stressors across displacement settings may hint at differences in physiological stress responses, few studies have directly explored such physiological variation among refugees awaiting resettlement. Building from our prior work, we drew on blood pressure (BP), fingernail cortisol, Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) antibody titers, and C-reactive protein (CRP) data collected from refugees in Serbia (n=158) and Kenya (n=132). We found that refugees in Kenya had higher BP than those in Serbia (p’s <0.001), whereas refugees in Serbia exhibited higher cortisol (p<0.001) and a lower likelihood of elevated CRP (p = 0.005). These site differences in BP remained significant after adjusting for age, sex, and time in camp (p’s<0.001). To test whether stress and inflammatory biomarkers could further explain these site differences, we included cortisol, EBV, and CRP as explanatory variables. Their inclusion did not attenuate the site–BP association (p’s<0.001). No association was observed for cortisol and CRP, whereas EBV showed a positive association with diastolic BP (p=0.015). While cross-sectional, our study aligns with the idea that refugees in different displacement settings experience distinct socioenvironmental conditions, which may result in different physiological profiles and varying susceptibility to health problems. Understanding these disparities is critical for tailoring context-specific interventions addressing refugees’ needs in different humanitarian settings. Using the Veggie Meter to assess fruit and vegetable consumption among children Lawrence University, United States of America Dietary composition is a risk factor for most chronic diseases; and fruit and vegetable consumption is a cornerstone of health-promoting diets. Methods for measuring dietary intake during daily life are subject to significant error due to poor recall, biased recall, and subject reactivity depending on the method used. Obtaining valid measures of fruit and vegetable consumption among children is especially challenging. We report here on use of the Veggie Meter, a portable, non-invasive, reflectance spectroscopy instrument that detects and scores skin carotenoid content, with third graders in Appleton, WI. 147 children from 4 different elementary schools were assessed during a field trip to a children’s museum and again 25-49 days later at their school. One educational emphasis during the field trip was the importance of fruit and vegetable consumption for maintaining health, in alignment with their third-grade health curriculum. Results (overall mean score 218, s.d. 99.4) are comparable to published results from similar communities. Variation between the first and second measurement for each participant was substantial (s.d of the difference: 87.0), with no significant change overall (mean difference: -11.7, 95% c.i. -25.89-2.47). There were no significant changes in scores by school from the first to the second measurement and no significant differences between schools. The Veggie Meter is an accessible tool for human biologists to assess fruit and vegetable intake. Additional research to assess reliability of individual measurements is indicated if a goal is to use change in Veggie Meter scores over time as an indicator of dietary flux. Building foundations for biocultural engagement: Preliminary insights from Igbo women in Minnesota Department of Anthropology, Biocultural Approaches to stress and Health Anthropological Laboratory, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, Illinois, USA Sustaining community-informed research requires careful attention to the experiences and priorities of the communities involved. In this interactive presentation, we sought to understand how Igbo women in Minnesota identify, define, and hypothesize notions of stress and inflammation while also gauging interest in future biocultural work on these topics. We piloted a survey with Igbo women in Minnesota to assess perceptions of stress, inflammation, and community health priorities. The survey included ranked stressors (social, financial, personal, psychological, acculturative, environmental, daily), multiple choice questions on perceived short- and long-term effects of stress and inflammation, and open-ended questions about the meaning and causes of “wahala.” Descriptive statistics summarized frequencies and distributions of categorical responses, while qualitative data were analyzed thematically. Across participants (N = 18), financial (50%) and daily stress (56%) were identified as most impactful, while acculturative stress was least emphasized; other stressors fell in the mid-range. Most respondents believed stress can cause illness both short-term (72%) and long-term (72%). Most participants agreed inflammation can cause short-term illness (83%), and a majority (72%) endorsed long-term effects. Participants expressed strong beliefs about the health consequences of stress and inflammation, with most interested in future studies. Open-ended responses defined “wahala” as stress, troubles, or problems, commonly linked to finances, family obligations, and health challenges. Interactive presentations serve as an effective first step in community-informed research by revealing nuanced perspectives. They can also be used to provide valuable feedback that can refine research questions, approaches, and guide the overall implementation of future biocultural work. Associations of post-traumatic stress disorder and metabolic syndrome with accelerated brain aging in South African adults: A case-control study 1Department of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, United States; 2SAMRC/Wits Developmental Pathways for Health Research Unit, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa; 3Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa; 4Genomics of Brain Disorders Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council / Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa Adults with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) face an increased risk of developing metabolic syndrome (MetS), and recent studies suggest that both conditions may contribute to accelerated aging of the brain, such as reductions in cortical thinning and brain volume reductions. Childhood trauma (CT) may exacerbate the effects of PTSD diagnosis and MetS on accelerated brain aging, though the role of CT exposure on disease-associated brain aging is not well-known. We examined the putative moderating effects of CT exposure on the associations of PTSD diagnosis and MetS status with brain aging in cases (n = 97) compared to trauma-exposed controls (n = 87). Brain age predictions were generated from T1-weighted magnetic resonance image scans using a pre-trained machine learning pipeline. A measure of relative brain aging known as “predicted age difference” (PAD) was calculated by subtracting chronological age from the predicted brain age. Results showed that increased waist circumference was associated with a higher PAD (b = 0.12, 95% CI [0.05, 0.2]). MetS status was also associated with increased PAD in adults with lower CT (b = -4.7, 95% CI [-8.7, -0.6]). Finally, the association between higher PAD and CT were more pronounced in participants with lower triglyceride levels (b = -4.01, 95% CI [-7.4, -0.7]). These results suggest that specific developmental and metabolic profiles may pose increased risks for accelerated brain aging in adulthood. Greater awareness of the possible brain aging effects of cardiometabolic risk factors can help healthcare providers manage and prevent future health complications and promote healthy aging. Does dietary quality predict inflammation in low-resource settings? Evidence from the Rural Embodiment and Community Health (REACH) study 1Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 2Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, Texas; 3Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 4Department of Anthropology, University of Missouri - Columbia, Columbia, MO; 5Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado - Colorado Springs, Colorado Springs, CO Low quality diets – characterized by limited consumption of vegetables, whole grains, fruit, and high intake of saturated fatty acids – have been associated with increased chronic inflammation in healthy adults. However, this relationship remains understudied in low-resource populations within high-income countries. Understanding this association is particularly important as low-resource communities often experience limited access to nutritious foods and are commonly exposed to environmental and socioeconomic stressors such as food deserts that increase inflammation. This study examines the relationship between dietary quality and intestinal inflammation among adults living in low-resource communities in Southwestern Illinois and the Mississippi Delta. Surveys and stool samples were collected from 103 participants (n = 63 in Illinois; n = 40 in Mississippi). Dietary quality was assessed using a modified Mediterranean Eating Patterns for Americans (MEPA) questionnaire which included 13 items on consumption of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, fish, and red meat. Each item was scored 0–1 based on adherence to MEPA and summed for a total score (0–13) representing overall diet quality. Intestinal inflammation was measured using fecal calprotectin (FC) levels determined by ELISA. Linear regression analyses controlling for community, age, sex, and income suggested no statistically significant association between dietary quality and log-transformed FC (logFC) (p = 0.085), though higher diet scores tended to correspond with slightly lower inflammation. Notably, higher logFC was predicted by greater age (p = 0.029), and lower logFC was predicted by higher income (p = 0.012). Future analyses will assess dietary quality in relation to biomarkers of systemic inflammation. Do those with ADHD hold occupations that work to their strengths? Relationships of ADHD diagnosis and polygenic scores with occupational history and job skills in Add Health 1Department of Anthropology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA; 2Center for Studies in Demography and Ecology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA; 3Department of Biology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA Roughly 15.5 million US adults have attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). The high prevalence and heritability (~80%) of ADHD suggest that it may be a case of evolutionary mismatch. Additionally, ADHD symptoms can fluctuate, with abatement corresponding with certain environmental contexts. We hypothesize that, just as ADHD can be more impairing in some contexts, ADHD may be beneficial in others. Some qualitative research, including our work interviewing individuals with ADHD (N=12), supports this. Understanding patterns of occupational history and ADHD may identify contexts in which ADHD may be beneficial, highlight the positives of ADHD, provide potential avenues for therapeutic intervention, and inform future research directions. Using National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) data, we seek to characterize the relationship between ADHD and job history and characteristics. We predict that individuals with a diagnosis of or greater polygenic scores for ADHD will be more likely to be found in jobs involving (1) problem solving and creativity, (2) physical movement, (3) fine manipulative tasks, (4) dynamic, active environments, and/or (5) varied work tasks. In Wave IV of Add Health, 5.2% (of 15,701 individuals) reported an ADHD diagnosis and, of those, 65% reported they were currently working; 53% were female and ages ranged from 24-33. ADHD polygenic scores (Min: -3.82; Max: 3.66) are available for 9,130 individuals. Jobs will be categorized using the Standard Occupation Classification system and O*NET. Our hypotheses and methods have been preregistered at: https://osf.io/p4zag/. We are waiting to conduct preliminary analyses to avoid inadvertent data mining. Rural Embodiment and Community Health (REACH) study: exploring differences of food insecurity across two low-resource U.S. communities 1Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO USA; 2Department of Anthropology, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO USA; 3Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA; 4Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado Colorado Springs, Colorado Springs, CO USA; 5Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, TX, USA Food insecurity—defined as having limited or uncertain access to nutritionally adequate and safe foods—remains prevalent in the U.S and is associated with adverse health outcomes across the lifespan. Food insecurity can impact communities differently depending on region and local context. However, research examining food insecurity in low-resource communities within high-income countries remains limited. Using data from the REACH study, we characterize differences in experiences of food insecurity and relationship to diet quality across two sites: a rural community in the Mississippi Delta and a peri-urban community in Southwestern Illinois. We collected survey data from 103 adult participants (Mississippi: n = 40; Illinois: n = 63). Food insecurity was assessed with questions from the USDA Household Food Security Survey Module. Preliminary results indicate significant differences in food insecurity experiences across sites, with the Illinois community experiencing a higher proportion of instances of skipped meals within the past year (X2 = 3.989, p = 0.045). Additionally, participants from the Illinois site reported greater usage of food donations (X2 = 4.164, p = 0.041) and lower perceptions of access to healthy or nutritious foods (X2 = 5.978, p = 0.0145). These results highlight the importance of contextual factors in understanding how food insecurity may uniquely impact different low-resource communities within higher-income countries. Further analysis from 16S rRNA sequencing data is ongoing to determine how differing experiences of food insecurity may influence diet and gut microbiome composition across sites. Evaluating new methods for capillary blood sample collection to facilitate field-based research in human biology 1Department of Anthroology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL; 2Department of Psychology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL; 3Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL Finger-prick dried blood spots (DBS) are a minimally invasive alternative to venipuncture to collect blood samples for biomarker analysis in field-based research. A commonly used DBS protocol involves spotting capillary blood from a finger-prick onto Whatman #903 protein saver cards in the field for elution and analysis in the laboratory. However, the participant experience and sample quality can vary widely depending on the user’s level of experience. Commercial alternatives designed to address this variability include the Capitainer®B50, Capitainer®SEP10, and Tasso Mini T20. However, these devices have not been rigorously evaluated against other methods. This study evaluates the participant experience and sample quality from matched venipuncture samples, DBS samples collected on Whatman #903 cards, and dried blood and plasma samples using these newer devices collected in a laboratory setting. Across 32 participants, the mean age was 34.8 (SD 13.4), and the majority identified as female (53.1%) and white (73.3%). On scales of 1 to 5, the Tasso Mini T20 had the lowest average pain rating (1.3, SD 0.7), lowest discomfort rating (1.2, SD 0.4), and greatest ease of use (4.7, SD 0.4). Common issues with these newer devices include insufficient blood flow, blood clotting in sample collection inlets, and device failures. This study provides recommendations for selecting and using these newer devices to collect biomarker samples in field-based research. Global variation in children’s appetite regulation: Exploring the relationship between circulating leptin and adiposity among the Indigenous Shuar of Ecuador 1Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, Texas; 2Department of Biology, Baylor University, Waco, Texas; 3Independent Researcher; 4Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon; 5Department of Anthropology, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, Arizona; 6Department of Anthropology, Queens College (CUNY), Queens, New York; 7Global Station for Indigenous Studies & Cultural Diversity, Hokkaido University, Japan Knowledge of childhood appetite regulation (AR) largely stems from post-industrial populations, with limited research from low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and among subsistence populations inhabiting low resource environments. Leptin, a key hormonal biomarker of AR and energy status, signals energy reserves to the brain and down-regulates food intake. While circulating leptin levels are strongly correlated with adiposity in industrialized populations, the few existing studies (among adults) in LMICs suggest that this relationship may not be universal. This study contributes to this important area in AR research. Using an ELISA protocol validated for finger-prick dried blood spots (DBS), we measured leptin among Indigenous Shuar children from rural and peri-urban communities in Amazonian Ecuador (n = 90, aged 3-13 years). Children’s BMI-for-age z-scores (mean = 0.44 ± 1.0) were modest based on WHO standards, indicating a generally lean study population. Leptin levels (serum-equivalent mean = 2.1 ± 2.75 ng/mL) were considerably lower than those of U.S. reference children (mean = 15.6 ng/mL). However, as predicted, adiposity assessed via both skinfolds (p = 0.07) and bioimpedance analysis (p = 0.32) was not a significant predictor of children’s leptin levels in linear regression models controlling for age and sex. These findings support the hypothesis that children’s leptin is driven by factors beyond adiposity in low-resource contexts, suggesting additional roles for leptin in managing food intake and energy homeostasis when facing limited energy availability. We discuss these and other findings among the Shuar as they relate to improved understanding of global variation in children’s AR. Perinatal experiences and biological stress in Appalachia: A mixed-methods pilot study 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; 3Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina Appalachian mothers and infants are at higher risk for poor health outcomes compared to other regions of the United States. Previous Developmental Origins of Health and Disease work has demonstrated the importance of perinatal experiences to maternal and infant health outcomes. However, little work has been done in the region on the specific confluence of factors that contribute to these poorer outcomes and even less has been done around the underlying biological mechanisms that may be contributing to these disparities. This pilot study was conducted remotely with parent-infant dyads in the Ohio and North Carolina Appalachian regions to test potential research methods in this population. Birthing parents completed a 60- to 90-minute semi-structured interview via Zoom, and the Patient Health Questionnaire – Anxiety and Depression Scale survey, the Maternal Postnatal Attachment Scale survey, and a sociodemographic survey online. Sample collection packets were shipped to dyads to collect morning and evening dried urine samples. Dried urine samples were analyzed using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. 13 parents completed interviews and surveys, and 10 returned samples. Many parents cited transportation as a major challenge to receiving care, though this varied by desires for care (e.g. homebirth vs. hospital birth). Parent morning cortisol levels ranged from 0.005 µg/g-0.078 µg/g, and infants’ ranged from 0.003µg/g-0.084 µg/g. Parent and infant cortisol levels did not show strong correlation. This research design and methods could be used to explore effects of perinatal care experiences on a larger sample of mothers and infants in Appalachia. The effect of mind-body therapies (MBTs) on biomarkers of inflammation in cancer: A systematic review and meta-analysis School of Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences, Loughborough University, Loughborough, UK. Cancer remains a leading cause of death worldwide. Chronic inflammation is a hallmark of tumourigenesis, and elevated circulating inflammatory biomarkers (e.g., IL-6 and TNF-α) indicate poor prognosis. Psychological stress promotes chronic inflammation and tumour progression. Mind-body therapies (MBTs) such as yoga, Qigong, Tai Chi and meditation may reduce stress and modulate inflammatory effects. However, few systematic reviews have examined the effects of MBTs on inflammatory biomarkers as a primary outcome. This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated the effects of MBTs on circulating inflammatory biomarker levels in cancer patients and survivors. Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) published up to April 2025 were identified through comprehensive database searches. Eligible studies reported biomarker outcomes in cancer patients and survivors who engaged with MBTs. 608 studies were screened, and 13 RCTs were included. Random-effects meta-analyses were conducted for biomarkers reported in three or more studies (IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, TNF-α and cortisol). Results revealed a statistically significant increase in IL-10 levels in MBT participants compared to controls (effect size: d = 0.567; 95% CI: 0.118–1.017; p = 0.013; heterogeneity: I² = 66%), with yoga studies showing the largest effects. No significant overall effects were observed for IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α and cortisol. However, the MBT subgroup analysis revealed some consistent trends. Heterogeneity was high (I²>66%) for all biomarkers, likely due to small sample sizes and varied intervention protocols. Overall, MBTs were associated with increased IL-10 levels, but larger, more diverse RCTs are warranted to elucidate the long-term effects of MBTs on inflammation in cancer populations. Perceptions of prostate cancer prevention among middle-aged men in southeastern Mexico: A human biology perspective 1Department of Urology, Regional High Specialty Hospital of the Yucatan Peninsula - IMSS BIENESTAR; 2Department of Research, Regional High Specialty Hospital of the Yucatan Peninsula - IMSS BIENESTAR Background: Prostate cancer (PCa) represents the second most common neoplasm in men worldwide and one of the main causes of male mortality. In Mexico, cultural stigmas, limited awareness, and uneven healthcare access shape men’s engagement with preventive practices. This study explores perceptions and knowledge about PCa prevention among men over 40 years old in the Yucatán Peninsula, integrating behavioral and sociocultural dimensions of male health. Methods: A descriptive, cross-sectional study was conducted at the Regional High-Specialty Hospital of the Yucatán Peninsula (IMSS-Bienestar). After pilot testing, a validated questionnaire was administered through structured interviews. Quantitative variables were analyzed using descriptive statistics to identify dominant patterns of knowledge, beliefs, and self-perceived vulnerability related to PCa. Results: Eighty-six men aged 40–85 years (mean age 58) participated. Most (65%) had education below the high-school level. Only 39.5% recognized PCa as a malignant disease, 5.8% knew its population frequency, and over 60% were unaware of screening methods. Merely 16.3% perceived themselves at high risk of developing PCa. Conclusions: Findings reveal a marked gap between biomedical knowledge and local understandings of male health. Limited risk perception and low awareness reflect the intersection of cultural attitudes, educational inequalities, and restricted health communication. Addressing PCa prevention thus requires culturally sensitive, community-based approaches that integrate biological risk awareness with broader social determinants of health. (Truly) global birth stories 1University of Illinois Chicago, United States of America; 2Purdue University, United States of America; 3University of Washington, United States of America Global Birth Stories is an online anthropology archive purposefully aimed at amplifying the birth stories of the global majority. GBS seeks to move away from typical birth stories from affluent and Westernized settings. Instead, GBS focuses on the birth stories of (predominately) Black and Indigenous women with varying access to biomedical health care, such as rural areas where women birth at home by tradition, or sometimes because the nearest clinic is far away and might not have access to obstetric care. This Anthropology project examines how birth is experienced by different populations within the broader context of colonization, racism and capitalism, and globally widespread economic and health inequities. How is birth experienced by contemporary hunter-gathers like the Ba’Aka in the Central African Republic, or subsistence farmers in rural Mexico? GBS also examines how young mothers may birth differently than their mothers or grandmothers. How has medicalization (e.g., hospitals and cesarean deliveries) affected birth in the recently urbanized Argentine Toba and the Yucatec Maya? The utilization of social media appeals to the current realm of social outreach and information spread. Free, online publication of these stories, in multiple languages, will help expose fellow academics, obstetricians and other birth workers, and a broader public, to ways of birthing that they would rarely conceptualize. In conclusion, Global Birth Stories can transform ideas and narratives of birth, motherhood, and beyond. Brown adipose tissue activity and metabolic responses to cold exposure 1Eck Institute for Global Health, University of Notre Dame, United States of America; 2Department of Anthropology, University of Notre Dame; 3Research Unit of Internal Medicine and Biomedicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oulu, Oulu, Finland; 4Arctic Centre, University of Lapland, Rovaniemi, Finland; 5Pediatric Gastroenterology and Metabolic Diseases, Pediatric Institute, Poznan University of Medical Sciences, Poznan, Poland; 6Medical Research Center (MRC), Oulu University Hospital, Oulu, Finland; 7Biocenter Oulu, University of Oulu, Oulu, Finland Brown adipose tissue (BAT) supports non-shivering thermogenesis and may influence lipid and glucose metabolism, processes involved in metabolic health. Yet, much of what we know about BAT comes from clinical or laboratory settings. This study examines metabolic and biomarker responses to acute cold exposure in sub-Arctic Finland, where prolonged winters create a relevant setting for studying cold stress. We assessed 51 adults (20 reindeer herders, 31 office workers), from the Lapland region of Finland. All participants underwent standardized cold exposure via a water perfused garment for 30 minutes, with metabolic rate (via indirect calorimetry), supraclavicular (SC) skin temperature (via thermography), and biomarker assessment conducted pre- and post-exposure. Participants were divided post hoc into high and low response groups based on mean post cold exposure SC temperature (34.2˚C). Linear regressions assessed associations between SC temperature and biomarkers. Cold exposure resulted in a 12.8% decrease in glucose levels across the cohort. Higher SC temperature predicted lower post-exposure glucose (β = -0.37, p < .01), triglycerides (β = -0.45, p < .001), and increased HDL cholesterol (β = 0.40, p < .01). Total cholesterol to HDL ratios improved in the high SC group but worsened in the low SC group. As a proxy for BAT activity SC temperature was more predictive of lipid and glucose shifts than metabolic rate, suggesting a more direct influence on biomarker changes. These findings highlight how BAT activity during cold exposure may help explain population-level variations in metabolic health. Indicators of metabolic syndrome among Shuar occur at lower BMI than standard obesity thresholds. 1The University of Oregon; 2Arizona State University; 3Northern Arzona University; 4Queens College; 5Baylor University; 6Washington University in St. LouisBaylor University; 7University of Colorado--Colorado Springs; 8Washington State University; 9Yale University; 10University of California Berkley Body mass index (BMI) remains a widely used measure of metabolic risk, despite known limitations. Because socio-cultural factors complicate relationships between body composition and health, the clinical utility of BMI thresholds is strongest when validated against population-specific morbidity risk. However, few references are available for Indigenous subsistence populations, particularly at early stages of market integration when increases in BMI are anticipated. Preliminary analyses among Indigenous Shuar of Ecuador suggested BMI is a strong predictor of elevated total cholesterol (TC), fasting glucose (FG), and blood pressure (BP). Here, we use cross-sectional data from 423 Shuar adults aged 18-60 (282 females) to determine optimal BMI thresholds for predicting metabolic syndrome. Morbidity was assessed using Adult Treatment Panel III criteria for Metabolic Syndrome (FG> 110mg/dL, TC > 200, BP >130/>85 mmHg). Morbidity risk was used to establish BMI cutoffs, analyzed using receiver operating characteristics (ROC). Cutoff effectiveness was assessed using the area under the curve (AUC) and Youden’s index. Significant AUC values (0.603-0.720) indicated that optimal BMIs for identifying risk of both single morbidity and comorbidity were 25kg/m2 for females and 26kg/m2 for males. Metabolic syndrome appears among Shuar at lower BMIs than standard obesity cutoffs (BMI > 30kg/m2). Using Shuar-specific BMI thresholds increases the number of individuals identified with obesity from 13% to 54% for females and 8% to 43% for males. These findings are important for Shuar health providers, as well as for interpreting results for Shuar study participants. Body fat percentage, not early life experiences, predicts blood pressure in children in Utila, Honduras 1Department of Anthropology, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA; 2Department of Anthropology, University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Indiana, USA; 3Utila Child Health Project, Utila, Bay Islands, Honduras; 4Department of Anthropology, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington, USA; 5Department of Psychology, Nipissing University, North Bay, Ontario, Canada Elevated blood pressure can help distribute metabolic resources through the body, but it can also lead to pathology. Life history theory predicts that natural selection has shaped energy allocation systems that adjust strategically to psychosocial and energetic challenges posed by the environment. We tested the hypothesis that greater psychosocial challenges will necessitate a greater increase in mean arterial pressure (MAP), predicting that higher social-economic-political-emotional (SEPE) stress exposure would be associated with higher MAP. We also tested whether adiposity positively predicts MAP. We measured the growth and development of 222 children longitudinally and cross-sectionally from 2023-2025 in Utila, Honduras, an island in community experiencing variable SEPE stressors. Standard anthropometrics, blood pressure, and morning salivary hormones were collected and SEPE factors were reported by primary caregiver at consent to the study. A Saint Nicolaus House Analysis network showed a positive correlation between age adjusted MAP and body fat percentage (r = 0.29). Multiple regression analysis revealed no significant relationship between SEPE factors and MAP (β = -0.86 and -0.78; p = 0.18 and 0.47). Instead, body fat percentage was positively associated with MAP (β = 3.06; p = 0.01). This result suggests that nutritional and metabolic status of children is an important predictor of potential cardiovascular risk. In contrast to our predictions, MAP appeared relatively robust to variable stress exposures among children in Utila. These findings highlight the importance of culturally and geographically specific studies of stress and blood pressure. The Role of Workplace Hierarchies in Nurses’ Stress and Experiences: A Biocultural Perspective University of Notre Dame, United States of America Hierarchical systems are a central part of how biomedical healthcare organizations manage administrative and clinical positions. Nurses serve an integral role in these healthcare systems, but the workforce is consistently grappling with high rates of burnout. In anthropology, hierarchical social systems have been linked to unequal health outcomes through differences in stress and social experience. Social and structural hierarchies may influence disparities in psychosocial stress by shaping day-to-day experience in nursing roles. This project investigates how social and structural characteristics of nursing positions in healthcare systems may relate to patterns of psychosocial stress and stress-responsive biology, and whether vocational calling is associated with individual caregiving experiences via patterns of work-related psychosocial stress and social connection. We conducted surveys and interviews focused on mental well-being and workplace experience with nurses from two units at a Midwest hospital (N=12), combined with in-unit, direct behavioral observations of care team dynamics (N = 325 interactions observed). Nurses reporting greater work engagement reported stronger vocational identities in nursing (p < 0.01) and higher social support (p < 0.05) than those scoring lower for work engagement. Through behavioral observations, we found a significant association between the hierarchical context of interactions and behavior type (p < 0.05). Observed interactions between nurses and more senior care personnel were more likely to include submissive behaviors, whereas interactions among nurses were characterized by more supportive behaviors. Further analyses will consider links between reported psychosocial stress, vocational identity in nursing, and occupational satisfaction with nurses’ cortisol and oxytocin. Anthropometric Predictors of Hypertension in Ageing Populations: Evidence from Lucknow, India Department of Anthropology, University of Delhi, India Hypertension is a growing global public health concern, particularly among older adults, and continues to affect a significant portion of the world's population. In India, demographic transitions and lifestyle changes have intensified the burden of non-communicable diseases, with hypertension emerging as a leading contributor to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Ageing itself is a non-modifiable risk factor, and isolated systolic hypertension due to arterial stiffening poses heightened risks in later life. Despite global advances in hypertension management, low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) like India face challenges, particularly in addressing its problems among the older adults. Evidence from national surveys such as the Longitudinal Ageing Study in India (LASI) highlights the role of central obesity and overweight status in exacerbating hypertension risk. Waist circumference, body mass index (BMI), and waist-to-height ratio (WHtR) are key predictors of cardiovascular outcomes. This cross-sectional study investigates the association between anthropometric measures and socioeconomic factors with hypertension among 431 older adults in Lucknow, India. Overall, 64% of participants were hypertensive. Multivariable logistic regression revealed that individuals with high WHtR had nearly four times higher odds of hypertension, while those with higher education levels had 70% lower odds and the model was statistically significant (p<0.001). Findings underscore the strong link between central obesity and hypertension, emphasizing WHtR as a reliable screening tool. The study advocates for targeted interventions focusing on obesity reduction and education to promote successful ageing and early detection of hypertension in older populations. The impact of environmental enteric dysfunction and immune activity on Indigenous Shuar children’s growth: evidence from osteocalcin, a biomarker of bone formation 1Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, TX; 2Department of Biology, Baylor University, Waco, TX; 3Department of Anthropology, Queens College (CUNY), Queens, NY; 4Department of Anthropology, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ; 5Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR; 6Global Station for Indigenous Studies & Cultural Diversity, Hokkaido University, Japan Environmental enteric dysfunction (EED), an acquired condition of the small intestine, is a major contributor to childhood growth faltering globally, yet its effect on growth metabolism and bone formation has not been directly explored. To address this problem, this study investigates novel measures of osteocalcin (OC), the main non-collagenous protein in bone matrix and a biomarker of bone formation, among Indigenous Shuar children of Ecuador. Data were collected from 373 children (ages 4–13 years) in the Upano Valley (UV, n = 192) and more remote Cross-Cutucú (CC, n = 181) geographic regions. Anthropometric data and finger-prick dried blood spots were collected, and OC, intestinal fatty acid-binding protein (IFABP, a biomarker of EED), and total immunoglobulins G and E (IgG and IgE, measures of adaptive immune activity) were assessed using ELISA. Mean OC concentration was 71,738 ± 46,998 pg/ml, with more market-integrated UV children exhibiting greater OC than those from the CC (+108%, p < .001). Regional OC differences appear partly driven by greater EED and immune burden in the CC. As predicted, OC was negatively related to IFABP (p = .007), IgG (p = .006), and IgE (p = .007). Demonstrating the utility of osteocalcin as a biomarker of children’s linear growth among the Shuar, osteocalcin positively predicted height-for-age z-scores (p < 0.001) and knee height-for-age z-scores (p < .0001) and negatively predicted odds of stunting (p < 0.001). Collectively, these findings provide novel insight into how EED and immune activation drive global variation in children’s metabolism and growth. Evidence of selection on the BDNF Val66Met (rs6265-A) variant across global populations 1Department of Biological Sciences (Human and Evolutionary Biology Section), University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA; 2Department of Anthropology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA Recent work has linked the Val66Met polymorphism (rs6265) in the Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor gene (BDNF) to variation in brain function and health. Specifically, the Met allele has been correlated with reduced activity-dependent secretion of the BDNF protein, affecting cognition, brain structure, and psychiatric health. However, some studies have suggested that this variant may have conferred biological advantages in past environments, raising the possibility that genetic variation at rs6265 could have been a target of natural selection. To test this hypothesis, we examined publicly available sequence data from the Human Genome Diversity Project and the 1000 Genomes Project for evidence of selection using several statistical methods, including the integrated haplotype score (iHS), extended haplotype homozygosity (EHH), number of segregating sites by length (nSL), and Conditional Likelihood Under Evolutionary Scenarios (CLUES2). Our results revealed signatures of positive selection in the form of long-range EHH around the derived Met allele at rs6265 in globally diverse populations. Furthermore, selection coefficient (s) estimates indicated significant selective pressure at genetic variation in BDNF (including rs6265) consistent with a classic selective sweep model. Additionally, we observed the highest s estimate at rs6265 in South Asia (s = 0.0975, [95% CI: 0.03076-0.16422]; -log10(p) = 3.21) comparable to estimates for alleles associated with lactase persistence in pastoralist populations, (among the strongest known cases of positive selection in humans). Collectively, these findings shed light on the evolutionary dynamics of functionally important variation in BDNF and highlight the possible interplay between adaptation and disease susceptibility in modern populations. Exploring environmental factors related to childhood physical activity in a low-resource U.S. community: a mixed-methods pilot study 1Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 2Department of Biology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 3Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, Texas; 4Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, CO; 5Department of Anthropology, University of Missouri - Columbia, Columbia, MO Childhood physical activity (PA) is associated with numerous health benefits. However, living in lower-resource areas within high-income countries is associated with reduced access to safe outdoor space, formal sports, and active commuting opportunities, potentially reducing childhood PA. This exploratory, mixed-methods pilot study assessed how perceived environmental factors relate to PA among children ages 5-12 years (n = 17) living in a low-resource community in Southwestern Illinois. Children completed questionnaires, narrative drawing interviews, and a week of accelerometer wear (Axivity AX3); parents completed questionnaires. Initial regression models showed a trend towards negative correlation between parent-reported Neighborhood Environment Index (NEI, higher scores indicate a more positive perception of neighborhood attributes) and child-reported activity frequency (p = 0.06). Among children with valid accelerometry data (n = 12), average acceleration (a measure of activity volume), was negatively associated with parental NEI (p = 0.01), equating to a 4.4-hour difference in daily walking time between the most and least active participants. Contrary to published literature, these results suggest that more active children tended to have parents who perceived more adverse neighborhood environments. In narrative drawing interviews children discussed playing with friends and siblings, being in nature, playing sports, and playground equipment as supportive of play, while outdoor pests, stray animals, and inclement weather were common barriers. These preliminary data suggest children and parents have different perceptions of their environment and factors supporting childhood PA. Future research on childhood PA promotion should include children’s views on environmental factors which facilitate versus inhibit activity. Hormonal decay after death: Evaluating DHEA-S as a potential molecular marker for postmortem interval estimation 1University of Montana, Missoula, MT, United States of America; 2Baylor University, Waco, TX, United States of America Post-mortem interval (PMI) estimation is a central component of forensic anthropological investigation, but traditional methods for estimating time since death lose accuracy after ~72 hours. Recent research indicates that some steroid hormones may undergo predictable degradation patterns after death, offering potential use as biochemical clocks for PMI estimation beyond this threshold. Cortisol, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), and its sulfate form (DHEAS) are of particular interest due to their metabolic stability, systemic influence, and association with trauma. This study investigates whether hormonal degradation patterns correlate with time elapsed since death and body temperature, evaluating their potential as biochemical PMI markers. 160 mL of fresh, whole blood were divided and stored under three conditions: refrigeration (2–4°C), room temperature (~22°C), and incubation (37°C). Sera from sample aliquots under each condition were separated every eight hours across five days before complete coagulation occurred. DHEAS concentrations were determined via commercial ELISA, and DNA quantified on both sera and red blood cells via qPCR. DHEAS concentrations were analyzed with respect to time and temperature using regression modeling and repeated-measures ANOVA. Results demonstrate that sera can be separated even after five days from samples stored at room temperature but not at elevated temperature after four days. Refrigerated samples exhibit minimal RBC presence throughout the five-day period. DHEAS concentrations also decrease consistently with increasing temperature over time. Further research will assess the utility of serum recovery from the deceased under variable environmental conditions as well as the use of predictable changes in steroid hormone concentrations in accurately estimating PMI. How are socioeconomic status and food insecurity related to hepatic health in US adults? 1Department of Anthropology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana; 2Human Biology Program, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana; 3The Irsay Institute for Sociomedical Sciences Research, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana; 44The Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender, and Reproduction, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana Human biologists have long recognized the influence of socioeconomic status (SES) on health outcomes, yet the relationship between SES and hepatic health has received little attention. The liver is crucial to metabolism and detoxification, plays a prominent role in digestion and its function is strongly associated with diet quality. There is a well-documented relationship between poor diet quality and food insecurity, the latter often reflecting underlying socioeconomic constraints. Despite this, there is a dearth of literature investigating how SES and food insecurity relate to hepatic health. We take a biocultural approach to fill this gap using data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES 2003-2018), including demographics, questionnaires, biomarkers indicating hepatic health, and 24-hour dietary recalls. Variables were classified as binary (e.g., food insecure/food secure), and covariates such as age, sex, immigration status, education, and income, were used to tease apart associations between hepatic health and SES. Those experiencing food insecurity were significantly more likely to have a liver condition (2.83% vs 3.92%, p <0.001), had a notable lower poverty-to-income ratio (3.10 vs 1.45, p <0.001), and consumed less protein/day (84.76g vs 88.57g, p < 0.001). Additionally, five of the six biomarkers were significantly associated with food insecurity and having a liver condition. Our results emphasize the importance of a biocultural approach for understanding the relationships between social inequality and liver health and disease. Future research should consider additional biocultural factors, such as sexual orientation and substance abuse, as part of the relationship between SES and liver health. A systematic review of social and environmental determinants of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in human milk The Ohio State University, United States of America Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are types of synthetic chemicals that persist in industrial contexts, consumer products, and environmental matrices. PFAS are a serious health concern because they can interfere with hormone function as endocrine disruptors, reduce immune response, and impact growth and development. PFAS have been measured in human milk, reflecting an intergenerational transfer to infants through breastfeeding. This systematic review aims to evaluate the social and environmental determinants of PFAS in human milk. We conducted a PubMed search using a combination of PFAS and human milk as MeSH terms and title or abstract words. Original research was included if PFAS was measured in human milk, and a social or environmental determinant was assessed. The search yielded 120 results, and 39 studies from 18 countries were included in this review after screening for inclusion/exclusion criteria. Nineteen studies explored associations with dietary factors (48.7%), 9 of which showed significant positive associations with PFAS concentrations (23.1%). Four studies found significant positive associations with the use of consumer products and PFAS concentrations (10.3%). Environmental exposures, such as contaminated water and soil, vicinity to industrial production, and waste incineration, were assessed in 13 studies (33.3%). Other socioeconomic factors, including income, education, occupation, demographics, and rural-urban residence, were explored in 15 studies (38.5%) as covariates. These results suggest that some PFAS in human milk can be reduced with behavioral interventions in diet and consumer products. The social and environmental determinants of PFAS in human milk highlight the complexity of infant PFAS exposure via breastfeeding. Inequality, food insecurity, and HIV: A test of syndemicity in Cameroon 1Department of Anthropology, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, NC; 2Department of Anthropology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA; 3Department of Data and Decision Sciences, Emory University, Atlanta, GA The frequent co-occurrence of food insecurity and adverse socioeconomic and health conditions, such as gender inequality and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in Sub-Saharan Africa, has led some scholars to characterize these interactions as synergistic epidemics or “syndemic.” Using the 2018 Cameroon Demographic and Health Surveys, we examined whether food insecurity and gender inequality synergistically influence HIV infection among women. Overall HIV prevalence was 4.1%, and moderate-to-severe food insecurity affected 19% of participants. In survey-weighted logistic regression, food insecurity alone was not significantly associated with HIV infection in unadjusted (OR 1.24, 95% CI 0.95–1.61, p = 0.11) or adjusted models controlling for age, education, wealth, urban residence, and SWPER empowerment domains (OR 1.25, 95% CI 0.89–1.76, p = 0.20). Interaction analyses between food insecurity and decision-making empowerment similarly showed no evidence of synergistic effects (interaction OR 0.94, 95% CI 0.62–1.44, p = 0.78). Using predicted probabilities to assess “distance” to a syndemic, the observed joint risk of HIV among women experiencing both food insecurity and low decision-making empowerment (0.047) was slightly below the expected additive risk (0.052), indicating no statistical evidence of synergistic interaction. These findings suggest that, in Cameroon, food insecurity and empowerment do not operate synergistically to increase HIV risk, though a modest portion of the population experiences both risk factors. Our analysis provides a reproducible workflow for empirically testing degrees of syndemicity using secondary individual-level data, providing insight into the conditions under which syndemics may occur. Perinatal exposure to lead, arsenic, and zinc and adolescent neurodevelopmental outcomes in Nepal: A prospective cohort study 1Central Department of Zoology, Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu, Nepal; 2Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA; 3Department of Human Ecology, Graduate School of Medicine, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan Emerging literature has reported an inconsistent impact of early-life metal exposure on neurodevelopment during adolescence. This study investigated the association between perinatal exposure to toxic (lead, arsenic) and essential (zinc) elements and neurodevelopmental outcomes assessed by using the Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence (WASI-II) at 14 years of age, using data from a birth cohort in Chitwan, Nepal. We followed 100 mother-infant dyads recruited at birth and measured concentrations of Pb, As, and Zn in cord blood (n = 100) and urine (n = 74) at 14 years. Growth environment was characterized using the Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) scale and sociodemographic surveys. Metal exposure levels in this cohort were generally moderate, falling between background and high-risk populations across global studies. Multivariate regression models adjusting for sex, parental education, and income showed no significant associations between cord blood or urine concentrations of Pb, As, or Zn and adolescent WASI-II scores. Higher parental education and household income were positively associated with Verbal Comprehension, Perceptual Reasoning, and Full-Scale scores. Our findings suggest that, in this population, perinatal levels of Pb, As, and Zn did not predict adolescent WASI-II scores, while postnatal growth environment did. Contraceptive preferences and decision-making among women in American Samoa: A mixed-methods study to inform future family planning efforts 1Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, CT; 2Department of Anthropology, Yale University, New Haven, CT; 3Obesity, Lifestyle, and Genetic Adaptations Study Group, Pago Pago, American Samoa; 4Department of Chronic Disease Epidemiology, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, CT; 5Lyndon B. Johnson Tropical Medical Center, Faga'alu, American Samoa Family planning services represent a critical component of public health, preventing unintended pregnancies, protecting against sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), and allowing individuals and families to time their pregnancies as desired. Despite these important contributions, the topic remains under-researched in regions including American Samoa, where strong cultural beliefs and structural barriers shape women’s access to and use of contraception. This mixed-methods study aimed to explore the sociocultural and structural factors influencing the preferences, perceptions of, and decision-making processes around contraception in American Samoan women. The study consisted of a cross-sectional survey assessing beliefs, barriers, and facilitators of contraception use as well as focus groups designed to contextualize the experience and choices of participants. 183 surveys and 4 focus groups (n = 22) were completed. Participants ranged in age from 18 to 63 years (mean = 32.5) and represented 34 of 63 villages across the territory. Perceptions of access varied among participants: 57.4% reported that obtaining contraception is “easy” or “very easy.” 79.8% reported having used family planning before, ranging from natural methods like withdrawal to hormonal methods such as the birth control shot (Depo-Provera). Qualitative findings revealed persistent stigma surrounding family planning, widespread concerns about side effects, and a strong desire for more comprehensive education about contraceptive options. These preliminary data highlight the importance of addressing a wider range of barriers to access. Ongoing analysis will further examine how social context and structural factors influence contraception use to inform more culturally responsive and community-driven family planning services in American Samoa. Socioeconomic Inequity and In-Hospital Mortality from Diabetes in Mexican Children Hospital Regional de Alta Especialidad de la Peninsula de Yucatan, Mexico Human wellbeing depends greatly on the resources available to face disease and on how health is experienced and lived. Coping with illness requires access to social, economic, and health resources. Diabetes mellitus (DM) is among the most well-known chronic diseases whose outcomes and severity are largely determined by socioeconomic constraints worldwide. Evidence from Mexico suggests an increasing burden of DM, strongly linked to marginalization and social inequities. Under the hypothesis that DM diagnosis may influence life expectancy and mortality in young populations, we aimed to describe the trends of hospitalizations and in-hospital deaths due to diabetes in Mexico. For this purpose, we analyzed data from the Ministry of Health (SS/DGIS) and the National Health Information System (SINAIS) for the 2021–2025 period, using ICD-10 codes E10–E14.7 and the Gini coefficient as a measure of economic inequality. A total of 7,379 first-time hospital admissions of individuals under 18 years of age were included, with an overall mortality rate of 9.6 deaths per 1,000 discharges. The mean age was 12 years, and 57% were female. Guanajuato reported the highest number of cases of type 1 and malnutrition-related diabetes, while the State of Mexico recorded the highest number of deaths and the greatest frequency of type 2 and other forms of diabetes. Notably, Guanajuato ranks as the second state with the lowest economic inequality, whereas the State of Mexico ranks seventh among those with the highest inequality. These findings suggest a potential link between social inequity and diabetes outcomes on this population in Mexico. Associations between University of Oregon Health Services sexual wellbeing programs, STI positivity rates, and number of students testing for STIs 1Global Health Biomarker Laboratory, Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA; 2University Health Services, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis are some of the most prevalent sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in the United States. The University of Oregon is located in Lane County which continues to have the highest reported numbers of syphilis cases in Oregon. Young adults account for roughly half of the positive STI test results in the US. Considering the typical age of university attendance in the US is 18-22, these students are particularly at risk of contracting STIs. Beginning in 2018, University of Oregon Health Services (UHS) has implemented sexual wellbeing programs such as Sex Week and Protection Connection, a free sexual barrier program, to decrease STI rates on campus. It is hypothesized that the University of Oregon’s implementation of sexual wellbeing programs increased the number of students getting tested for HIV, chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis. Regression analyses were performed using HIV, chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis tests between 2018 and 2024 submitted to the University Health Services. Due to testing practices, chlamydia and gonorrhea test results are considered one test. A significant increase in syphilis tests taken at the University of Oregon was found (t=3.47, P=0.013). Results indicate that there was no significant increase in the number of HIV tests taken (t=0.68, P=0.522). There was no increase in the chlamydia/gonorrhea tests taken (t=-0.43, P=0.685). The results suggest while syphilis testing has increased since 2018, possibly due to UHS efforts, more programs must be focused on increasing testing for HIV, chlamydia, and gonorrhea. Brown adipose tissue activation in young adults University of Massachusetts Amherst, United States of America Brown Adipose tissue (BAT) plays a crucial role in regulating body temperature and storing energy. In adults, BAT is concentrated around the supraclavicular region. Previous studies with mouse models have shown that females have more active BAT when compared to male mice. This disparity is often credited toward higher estrogen levels in females. Our exploratory research investigates potential activators of BAT within a sample of college-aged adults. Our sample consists of 22 males and 34 females. 13 of the females in our study were on oral hormonal contraceptives at the time of data collection. In addition to a general demographic survey, we also incorporated the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), basic anthropometric measurements (height and weight), salivary samples, and dried blood spots. Preliminary results reveal that 61.7% of females and 36.4% of males showed BAT activation. We explored bivariate relationships between BAT activation and selected variables. Due to the small sample size, we selected a p-value of 0.1 as the cut off for significance. These models showed a relationship between sex and BAT activation (X2: 3.45, p-value: 0.06) and suggest that low BMI (18.5-24.9) and higher perceived stress levels are associated with BAT activation (X2: 3.19, p-value: 0.07 andX2: 5.48, p-value: 0.04, respectively). Additional analyses will explore the relationship between BAT and salivary estrogen level, C-reactive protein, and diet. While preliminary, this study adds to our understanding of human BAT and factors that contribute to its activation. Market integration and children’s gut health: Predictors of circulating endotoxin-core antibodies, a marker of environmental enteric dysfunction, among the Shuar of Ecuador Baylor University, United States of America Environmental enteric dysfunction (EED) is a subclinical condition of the small intestine linked to childhood growth faltering in unsanitary and low-resource contexts. This study investigates how household-level factors related to market integration (MI) and environmental exposures are associated with gut health and EED during childhood. Data were collected from 416 Indigenous Shuar children (aged 4-12 years) living in the market-integrated Upano Valley (UV: n=213) and remote Cross-Cutucú (CC: n=203) geographic regions. Household interviews and anthropometry were collected, and finger-prick dried blood spots were used to measure endotoxin-core antibodies (EndoCAb, a biomarker of EED and gut microbial translocation) with ELISA. Mean EndoCAb concentration was 0.54 ± 0.27 GMU/ml. Mixed effects linear regression models clustered by community and controlling for age and sex revealed no significant difference in EndoCAb concentration between the UV and CC regions (p =.622). However, household-level MI and pathogen exposure variables predicted EndoCAb; for example, ownership of market items (a proxy for household wealth) was negatively associated with EndoCAb (p =.033), while lack of running water (p =.001) and pig ownership (p =.047), known sources of pathogen exposure, both predicted greater EndoCAb. These findings suggest that MI may reduce the burden of childhood EED and improve gut health via pathways linked to wealth, access to clean water, and altered contact with animal pathogen vectors. Ongoing analyses will further assess the relationship between EndoCAb and children’s linear growth, enhancing understanding of how EED and poor gut health influence child development. Differences in sexual minority cognitive health between older adults living in Canada and the United States Indiana University Bloomington, United States of America Existing research suggests that sexual minority (SM) people experience higher levels of stress, leading to higher health risks in comparison to their heterosexual counterparts. Additionally, there is evidence that older SM people experience cognitive decline to a greater degree than their heterosexual peers. However, little is known about how cognitive health disparities in SM populations vary across countries. Using the Canadian Longitudinal Study of Aging (CLSA) and Health and Retirement Study (HRS) datasets, we examined differences in cognitive performance in SM people from Canada and the United States. Preliminary analyses of the CLSA data (N = 30,042) indicate SM adults were significantly younger, more likely to be male, and more urban-dwelling than heterosexual peers. Despite reporting higher psychological distress (p < 0.001) and slightly lower social support (p < 0.001), SM participants demonstrated significantly higher scores on all measures of verbal fluency (FAS tests; all p < 0.001), suggesting potential cognitive strengths or resilience in this population. Early analysis of the HRS data (N=4452) shows SM individuals had slightly higher cognitive performance than heterosexual peers (p < 0.05), but this effect becomes marginal when controlling for age, sex, and minority status. While both the Canadian and American SM populations outperformed the heterosexual populations on cognition tasks, differences were more pronounced in the Canadian population after controlling for potential covariates. We suspect these results to originate from differences in social and cultural values between the two countries, as discrimination stress would likely vary based on cultural acceptance of SM status. Unmasking kidney disease in a remote, hot-dry environment: High prevalence of reduced estimated glomerular filtration rate among semi-nomadic pastoralists 1Pennsylvania State University, PA; 2Elon University, Elon, NC; 3Duke University, Durham, NC; 4Northwestern University, Evanston, IL; 5Emory University, Atlanta, GA; 6National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya; 7University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE; 8The George Washington University, Washington, D.C.; 9University of Delaware, Newark, DE; 10Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), Nairobi, Kenya; 11Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA The prevalence of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is estimated to be 8-16% worldwide and rising, particularly in hot environments. Yet awareness of CKD is low in low-resource, remote regions because screening is expensive and requires laboratory capacity and CKD is asymptomatic until it is advanced and progresses to end-stage kidney disease. Using data collected by the Daasanach Human Biology Project in 2025, we assessed the prevalence of CKD among semi-nomadic pastoralist Daasanach adults (n=446) in hot-arid northern Kenya who rely on water containing elevated sodium-chloride levels. We used the NovaMax Pro point-of-care device with capillary fingerprick blood samples to assess creatinine and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) using the 2021-CKD EPI equation. Our preliminary findings suggest 47.1% of adults had eGFR <60 mL/min/1.73m2 signifying at least CKD stage 3a or mild to moderate loss of kidney function; 11.7% had at least CKD stage 3b (eGFR<45 mL/min/1.73m2; moderate to severe loss of kidney function); and 1.1% had at least CKD Stage 4 (<30 mL/min/1.73m2; severe loss of kidney function). Older age and higher adiposity were both significantly negatively associated with eGFR. For example, each year of age was associated with -0.5 mL/min/1.73m2 (95% CI: -0.38, -0.60; P<0.001). Repeat measurements are necessary as CKD is diagnosed after 3+ months of abnormal kidney function. Human biologists working in remote areas have a unique opportunity to provide critical screening and early detection to unmask the true burden of CKD, thereby contributing essential evidence to shape health policy and community-based interventions for improved outcomes. Assessment of childhood fruit and vegetable intake using the Veggie Meter: Preliminary findings from a low-resource U.S. community 1Baylor University, Department of Anthropology; 2Washington University in St. Louis, Department of Anthropology; 3Washington University in St. Louis, Department of Biology; 4University of Colorado - Colorado Springs, Department of Anthropology Fruit and vegetable intake (FVI) plays an important role in chronic disease risk and overall human health. Childhood FVI is especially important for optimal growth and establishment of lifelong healthy eating behaviors. Problematically, standard methods for measuring children’s FVI have major limitations. Self-report of FVI is often unreliable and high-performance liquid chromatography measurement of circulating plasma carotenoid concentrations—the gold standard approach—is invasive. Carotenoids, antioxidant pigments found in many fruits and vegetables, are an established marker of FVI. The Veggie Meter (Longevity Link Corporation) is a device that measures finger skin carotenoid concentrations using reflection spectroscopy, providing a field-friendly, non-invasive method for evaluating FVI. Here, we present cross-sectional pilot data assessing Veggie Meter scores among children (n = 21, 3-12 y) living in a food insecure community in Southwestern Illinois. Veggie Meter scores were low, ranging from 89-244 (possible range is 0-800, average for U.S. children ~238), with a mean of 174.1 (± 46.9). All children had scores indicating inadequate FVI, with two children having skin carotenoid levels below the Veggie Meter limit of detection. Though not significant, initial regression models indicate positive trends between Veggie Meter scores and measures of food/nutrition security, such as perceived healthful food availability (p < 0.2). We build on these findings using biomarkers of antioxidant activity to further investigate drivers of variation in children’s skin carotenoid concentrations. The Veggie Meter has the potential to provide quick, objective measures of children’s FVI, positioning it as a useful tool for future human biology studies. Executive Function and Diabetes Identity Integration in Adolescents and Emerging Adults with Type 1 Diabetes (Brief Title: T1DEFT – Type 1 Diabetes Executive Function and Identity Study) 1Department of Anthropology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC; 2Department of Human and Organizational Leadership Development, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC; 3Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC; 4Division of Pediatric Endocrinology, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is a chronic autoimmune condition that can emerge across the life course but is most often diagnosed during childhood or adolescence. An important yet understudied aspect of living with T1D is diabetes identity integration, which is the process of harmonizing one’s diabetes with one’s sense of self. Strong diabetes identity integration is essential for long-term self-management, psychosocial adjustment, and well-being, particularly during adolescence and young adulthood when identity formation and self-regulation are still developing. Effective T1D management relies on executive functions such as working memory, planning, and inhibition. However, little is known about how differences in these cognitive processes influence diabetes identity integration, particularly because executive function difficulties can increase challenges to effective diabetes self-management. Using survey and clinical data from individuals with T1D (ages 15-35), this study examines relationships between executive function challenges and diabetes identity integration. Executive function was measured using the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function-2 (BRIEF-2) Self-Report measure, and diabetes identity integration was assessed using the Accepting Diabetes and Personal Treatment (ADAPT) Survey. Stratified and multivariable analyses, including glycemic outcomes (HbA1c % and continuous glucose monitor time-in-target-range), diabetes technology use, and demographic variables, were assessed to evaluate mediating or moderating factors. Preliminary findings show that greater executive function challenges are linked to lower diabetes identity integration and higher glucose levels. By examining cognition, context, and identity, this study takes a biocultural approach to understanding diabetes self-management and highlights the need for culturally and cognitively adaptive care models. Epigenetic landscapes: Shaping susceptibility to health and disease Department of Anthropology, University of Delhi, India Epigenetics bridges the gap between genes and the environment, explaining how nutrition, lifestyle, and external exposures influence disease susceptibility without altering the DNA sequence. Among various epigenetic mechanisms, DNA methylation plays an important role in regulating gene activity and maintaining cellular homeostasis through dynamic cycles of methylation and demethylation. The epigenetic reprogramming of methylation during fertilisation and germ cell formation lays the foundation for lifelong genomic regulation, yet these patterns remain susceptible to environmental influences. Establishing a universal standard for gene-specific methylation is challenging, as methylation signatures vary considerably across tissues, ages, disease states, and environmental contexts. In contrast, global DNA methylation provides a broader and more consistent biomarker, particularly relevant for population-based health studies. Findings from studies in Haryana and Punjab showed significantly lower global DNA methylation among hypertensive and diabetic individuals compared to controls, while higher levels were observed in medically treated individuals and those with adequate folate levels. Exposure to air pollution, smoking, and ageing was associated with global hypomethylation, highlighting environmental impacts on the epigenome. Maternal–infant methylation analysis further indicated that early maternal methylation influences infant methylation, though this association weakens in complicated pregnancies such as gestational diabetes or hypertension. Together, these findings highlight global DNA methylation as a cost-effective, integrative biomarker for assessing chronic disease risk and intergenerational health outcomes across diverse Indian populations. The association of physical activity, acculturation, and cardiometabolic risk among first-generation South Asian American immigrants 1University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; 2University of California, San Francisco; 3Northwestern University South Asian (SA) immigrants in the United States experience higher risk for cardiometabolic (CM) disease than US Whites, due to a combination of physiological, social, and cultural risk exposures. Prevalent risk factors (i.e. central obesity, visceral adiposity) have been examined in the context of diet. However, few studies have focused on the impact of other social/lifestyle factors such as physical activity and acculturation. The objective of this study is to examine the relationship between physical activity and CM risk profile, and the interaction of acculturation strategy. Acculturation, the process by which individuals reject or retain their native culture and their host culture, was measured using a brief questionnaire and scores are categorized as assimilation, separation, integration, or marginalization strategies. We conducted secondary data analysis on a cross-section of the Mediators of Atherosclerosis in South Asians Living in America (MASALA) study conducted among 887 first-generation SA immigrants living in the San Francisco Bay Area and the greater Chicago area. We used latent class analysis to identify clusters of CM risk factors. We then used regression models to examine whether associations between physical activity and CM risk profile (composite outcome using blood pressure, HbA1c, blood lipids, and waist-to-height ratio) differ by sex, age, or acculturation strategy, adjusting for covariates. Our preliminary findings suggest that an integration or assimilation strategy is associated with increased physical activity levels and a more favorable CM risk profile and support future research investigating duration, frequency, and intensity of physical activity among different SA subgroups. Fragmentation of care during the postpartum period: An evolutionary perspective University of California, Los Angeles Humans are cooperative breeders for whom alloparental care is critical to reproductive success. During the postpartum period, mothers bond with their infants, establish breastfeeding, and troubleshoot problems, tasks that come with a steep learning curve and require multifaceted support. For most of our evolutionary history, this support came mainly from women’s kin networks, particularly the maternal grandmother. In contrast, women in the US face an evolutionary mismatch in which lactation training, resource supplementation, and socio-informational support are dispersed across a fragmented health care system. Mothers bear the burden of coordinating their own care amid time constraints, limited knowledge, undervaluation of their own health over that of their infant, and other psychosocial stressors. Yet little is known about how care providers themselves perceive fragmentation in the postnatal care landscape. The present study draws upon five focus groups of healthcare professionals (n=29), stratified by postpartum specialty: postpartum doulas, midwives, lactation consultants, obstetricians, and pediatricians. Both qualitative and quantitative (free-listing, mind-mapping) responses revealed clear discontinuities in the domains of care respondents felt equipped to address. However, postpartum doulas stood out as being uniquely suited to help mothers leverage care from others, in addition to providing multifaceted care themselves. These findings highlight the critical but under-recognized role of postpartum doulas in realigning modern maternal care with the cooperative roots of our evolutionary past. Cross-cultural perspectives on men’s age-related testosterone decline: Evidence from the U.S. and farming and forager communities in the Congo Basin 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 Age-related declines in men’s testosterone have been documented across a range of cultures and ecologies. Yet, evidence from smaller-scale subsistence societies remains mixed, suggesting local lifestyle and energetic factors may contribute to age–related testosterone trajectories. Prior research has linked age-related declines in men’s testosterone with changes in body composition, but the degree to which these associations vary cross-culturally remains unclear. Here, we analyzed men’s salivary testosterone from Bayaka forager and Bandongo fisher-farmer men (n=45; obs=179; ages: 22-68 years) from the Republic of the Congo and serum total testosterone from a large, nationally-representative study of U.S. men (NHANES; n=6,227; ages: 20-70 years) to evaluate age-based changes in testosterone and moderation by body composition and ethnicity (for the Congo study). For both the Congo- and U.S.-based samples, we calculated body mass index from individuals’ height and weight, and also analyzed skinfold thickness for the Congolese participants. Men’s testosterone was significantly lower with age in the U.S. (p<0.001) and Congo (p<0.001). This pattern was similar for both BaYaka and Bandongo men. Additionally, neither BMI nor skinfold thickness moderated the decline in testosterone with age (all p>0.4). Our findings confirm age-related declines in men’s testosterone and show broad similarities in these declines across distinct ecologies and cultures. We did not find that body composition moderated these age-related patterns. Overall, this study provides further insight into men’s testosterone trajectories as they age in relation to context-specific factors, such as energetic condition. Major and minor sickness classifications among Hadzabe foragers 1Department of Biology, Florida State University; 2Department of Anthropology, Florida State University; 3Native American and Indigenous Studies Center, Florida State University; 4School of Public Health, University of Nevada at Las Vegas; 5Department of Archaeology and Heritage, Institute of Resource Assessment, University of Dar es Salaam, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania; 6Department of Anthropology, University of Nevada at Las Vegas Understanding the prioritization of health issues among the Hadzabe foragers provides insight into the community’s disease burden. In this exploratory study, we surveyed 91 adults (mean age = 39, 46% female) from six bush camps about sickness, including questions about “major” and “minor” health problems in the community. Overall, 51.8% of participants identified communicable diseases as a major community concern. HIV/AIDS was frequently mentioned (35.2%), followed by gonorrhea (16.8%). Gonorrhea was primarily reported among male participants (24.4%) compared to female participants (7.1%). 21.9% of respondents identified non-communicable diseases as a major issue. Cardiovascular conditions were the predominantly reported major health issue (8.03%). 39.2% of participants reported no major illness/did not provide an answer. A majority (72.5%) identified communicable diseases as a minor issue. Among these, malaria was the most reported illness (52.7%), followed by stomach-related problems (25.5%). Over half of the participants (62.6%) reported non-communicable illnesses as a minor issue; the most prevalent problem was respiratory conditions (43.9%), such as non-specific cough and chest tightness, followed by headaches (40.7%), a common symptom of malaria that may also be caused by heat and environmental factors. The findings suggest that Hadzabe interpretations of illnesses as major or minor health issues are influenced by the prevalence of diseases (e.g., malaria endemicity) and local views. Understanding these classifications aligns health efforts with community priorities and enables tracking of changing prioritization in the face of market integration. Future studies can determine whether these classifications affect the Hadzabe's patterns of healthcare-seeking behaviors. Glucose breath tests among Maasai children in rural Kenya: Exploring the role of gut health in the relationship between water insecurity and child growth Baylor University, United States of America Water insecurity is increasingly recognized as an important factor influencing child growth outcomes in low-resource settings. Problematically, the pathways underlying this relationship are not clear. One potential key variable is children’s gut health. Here, we present data from novel glucose breath tests (GBT) performed among Maasai children living in rural Kenya. Prior research demonstrates that water insecurity and growth faltering are pervasive in the area. The GBT was performed with 103 children (ages 4-12 years) using a Gastro+ handheld breath hydrogen analyzer. Fasted children provided baseline hydrogen measures, drank a 2g/kg body mass glucose dose, and provided additional hydrogen measures every 15 minutes for 90 minutes. Impaired gut function indicating small intestinal bacterial overgrowth and carbohydrate malabsorption was identified using established criteria (e.g., hydrogen rise of >12 ppm). Results show that 31% of children met criteria for impaired gut function. Regression models controlling for age and sex were used to investigate relationships with GBT measures. Household water insecurity assessed via HWISE did not significantly increase children’s likelihood of impaired gut function (p = 0.138). However, several related measures did, including if household members did not treat drinking water (p = 0.021) or did not regularly wash hands before eating (p = 0.005). Indicating a link to growth faltering, children with impaired gut function measures were more likely to be underweight (p = 0.048). These findings demonstrate the utility of GBT measures in human biology research and support continued investigation of the role of gut health in the water insecurity-growth relationship. Correlating the postmortem interval to the human necromicrobiome in a semi-arid desert environment University of Montana, United States of America Understanding human decomposition processes in diverse ecological contexts is central to biological and forensic anthropology. This study examines how skin-associated microbial communities (the necromicrobiome) can enhance postmortem interval (PMI) estimation in semi-arid, high-elevation environments, where traditional methods often fail due to environmental variability. Research was conducted at the Forensic Investigation Research Station (FIRS) in western Colorado (1,416 m), a semi-arid, high-altitude setting underrepresented in existing PMI models. Human skin microbiota were sampled during decomposition, and bacterial communities were characterized through 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Accumulated degree days (ADD) were used to standardize decomposition timelines across variable thermal inputs. Building on findings by Burcham et al. (2024), which identified skin microbiomes as more reliable for PMI estimation than soil communities, this study aims to validate those results under distinct environmental conditions. Preliminary analyses highlight Helcococcus seattlensis as a consistent PMI indicator across climates. Conversely, taxa commonly observed in temperate regions such as, Olsenella alkaliphila, Savagea sp., Peptoniphilus stercorisius, Ignatzschineria sp., and Acinetobacter sp., appear less frequently, underscoring the role of climate in shaping microbial succession. This research contributes to the development of ecologically specific, non-invasive forensic tools and deepens our understanding of decomposition as a biological and ecological process. It supports efforts to improve human identification in underserved regions, reinforcing the broader anthropological goals of contextualizing death and enhancing access to justice through science. How does polygynous marriage affect cooperative childrearing networks in The Gambia? 1Department of Anthropology, Baylor University, Waco, TX; 2European Research University, Ostrava, Czech Republic; 3Anthropology Department, Binghamton University, New York, NY; 4Centre for Culture and Evolution, Brunel University, London, UK; 5Department of Anthropology, Pennsylvania State University, State College, PA; 6Department of Anthropology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT; 7Nutrition & Planetary Health Theme, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK; 8Medical Research Council Unit, The Gambia at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (MRCG), Fajara, The Gambia Anthropologists recognize that humans are cooperative breeders, with alloparenting—care provided by individuals other than the biological parents—playing a critical role in child health and development. The extent and sources of this alloparental care vary significantly due to socioecological variation in access to resources, post-marital residence, and marriage systems. It has been suggested that relative to children born to monogamous marriages, children born of polygynous unions may receive less paternal and patrilineal care due to a father’s resources being diluted across multiple wives and children, and that this reduction in care is one potential pathway by which these children often have comparatively poorer growth and health outcomes. However, the impact of a woman’s polygynous marriage on her broader alloparental network remains unknown. This study examined how a mother’s marriage type (monogamous vs. polygynous) affected alloparental care from both family members and unrelated community members. Using Bayesian analyses of data collected in collaboration with 474 mothers in The Gambia, we found that while children in polygynous marriages are less likely to receive care from their father and their father’s family, this is offset by a greater likelihood of receiving care from unrelated community members. Overall, we found no difference in the total amount of alloparental care between children born to monogamously and polygynously married women. However, sources of care differed, and these differences may have important implications for child health and survival. Our results emphasize the need for further research to explore how care from different sources influences child health. Socio-ecological determinants of Rickettsia spp. seroprevalence in Yucatan, Mexico: Insights from an ecological analysis 1Health Sciences School, Universidad Autonoma de Yucatan, Merida, Yucatan; 2Emerging and Re-emerging Diseases Laboratory, Universidad Autonoma de Yucatan, Merida, Yucatan; 3Research, Hospital Regional de Alta Especialidad de la Peninsula de Yucatan IMSS-Bienestar, Merida, Yucatan The transmission of tick-borne Rickettsia pathogens is a complex phenomenon driven by the synergy of arthropod vectors, environmental conditions, and socio-economic factors. Yucatan is an endemic region with diverse Rickettsia species, and its presence has been associated with individual characteristics such as age and sex, as well as environmental factors. However, structural determinants and ecological factors have not been adequately quantified in a representative sample. Our objective was to analyze the association between the seroprevalence of Rickettsia spp. and both social and environmental factors across regions of Yucatan. We conducted a cross-sectional and ecological study that included a representative sample of 390 participants distributed across three distinct areas of Yucatan. Indirect Immunofluorescence Assay was performed to determine seropositivity to Rickettsia spp. We used a Poisson regression model to assess the association between seroprevalence and social factors (percentage of poverty, educational lag, and lack of access to health insurance) and ecological factors (maximum temperature, rainfall, land use, and population density). We identified an overall seroprevalence of Rickettsia spp. of 31.28% (122/390). The regression analysis demonstrated that maximum temperature, educational lag, and a high marginalization index were associated with an increased risk of seropositivity. Conversely, higher population density was associated with a decrease in seroprevalence. Our findings demonstrate that structural social factors and ecological variables are significantly associated with Rickettsia seroprevalence. These results underscore the critical need for public health interventions focused on addressing the upstream determinants of health to effectively reduce the burden of rickettsial diseases in marginalized and high-risk populations. Multi-pollutant exposure and sexual maturation in adolescents 1Department of Anthropology, University at Albany, Albany, NY, USA; 2Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University at Albany, Albany, NY, USA; 3Center for the Elimination of Health Disparities, University at Albany, Albany, NY, USA Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) are known to be lipophilic and are associated with many adverse health effects in humans, such as alterations to sexual maturation (Tanner stages and age at menarche) and growth and development. The effects of exposures to multiple POPs have historically been difficult to determine due to high multi-collinearity in exposure. We seek to characterize relationships among toxicants and markers of sexual maturation using data on POP levels and sexual maturation in adolescents from the Mohawk Adolescent Well-Being Study (1995-2000; n = 271). The POPs for this analysis are: dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (p,p’-DDE), hexachlorobenzene (HCB), and PCBs (persistent, non-persistent, and airborne) along with blood lead levels. There are significant bivariate correlations between blood lead levels and delays in breast development (-0.254, p=0.003), female pubic hair development (-0.233, p=0.006) and age at menarche (-0.361, p<0.001); and DDE with advancements in male Tanner genital stage development (0.196, p=0.003) and pubic hair development (0.257, p=0.025). Exposure to multiple POPs can complicate the causal pathway of relationships between endocrine disruptors and the outcomes measured. To disentangle the multiple influences on sexual maturation elastic net regression will be used to further specify these exposure-outcome relationships. The results from this analysis will allow for further understanding of the impact of exposure to multiple toxicants at once. This work was supported by grants from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS-ESO4913; ES10904), and the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, National Institutes of Health (grant number 1 P20 MD003373). | ||
