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References for this Section

1. Szathmáry, EJE Non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus among aboriginal North Americans. Annual Reviews of Anthropology. 1994; 23: 457-82.

2. Fee M. Racializing narratives: obesity, diabetes and the ‘Aboriginal’ thrifty genotype. Social Science & Medicine. In press (2006), 10 pages.

3. Neel JV. Diabetes mellitus: a ‘thrifty’ genotype rendered detrimental by ‘progress’? American Journal of Human Genetics. 1962; 14: 353-362.

4. Zimmet P Globalization, coca-colonization and the chronic disease epidemic: can the Doomsday scenario be averted? Journal of Internal Medicine. 2000; 247: 301-310.

5. Kelm ME. Colonizing bodies: Aboriginal health and healing in British Columbia, 1900-50. Vancouver: UBC Press; 1998.

6. O’Dea K. Diabetes in Australian Aborigines: impact of the western diet and life style. Journal of Internal Medicine. 1992; 232: 103-117.

7. Martin DD, Shephard MDS, Freeman H, Bulsara MK, Jones TW, Davis EA, Maguire GP. Point-of-care testing of HbA1c and blood glucose in a remote Aboriginal Australian Community. Medical Journal of Australia. 2005; 182: 524-527.

8. Abate N, Chandalia M. The impact of ethnicity on type 2 diabetes. Journal of Diabetes and Its Complications. 2003; 17: 39-58.

9. Lieberman LS. Dietary, evolutionary, and modernizing influences on the prevalence of type 2 diabetes. Annual Reviews in Nutrition. 2003; 23: 345-77.

10. International Diabetes Foundation. Diabetes Atlas. 2nd Edition. Executive Summary. Brussels: International Diabetes Foundation; 2003.

11. Mooy JM, de Vries H, Grootenhuis PA, Boutler LM, Heine RJ. Major stressful life events in relation to prevalence of undetected type 2 diabetes: the Hoorn study. Diabetes Care. 2000; 23: 197-201. As cited in: Abate N, Chandalia M. The impact of ethnicity on type 2 diabetes. Journal of Diabetes and Its Complications. 2003; 17: 39-58.

12. Olson B. Meeting the challenges of American Indian diabetes: anthropological perspectives on prevention and treatment. In: Trafzer CE, Weiner D, editors. Medicine ways: disease, health, and survival among Native Americans. Walnut Creek, California: AltaMira Press; 2001: 163-184.

13. Crowshoe R, Manneschmidt S. Akak’stiman: a Blackfoot framework for decision-making and mediation processes. Calgary: University of Calgary Press; 2002.

14. Bruyere J, Garro LC. ’He travels in the body’: nehinaw (Cree) understandings of diabetes. The Canadian Nurse. 2000; 96: 25.

15. Lang GC. ’Making Sense’ about diabetes: Dakota narratives of illness. Medical Anthropology. 1989; 11: 305-327.

16. Bond CJ. A culture of ill health: public health of Aboriginality? Medical Journal of Australia. 2005; 183: 39-41.

17. Woodward D, Drager N, Beaglehole R, Lipson D. Globalization and health: a framework for analysis and action. Bulletin of the World Health Organization. 2001; 79: 875-881.

18. McNeill PM, Macklin R, Wasunna A, Komesaroff PA. An expanding vista: bioethics from public health, indigenous and feminist perspectives. The Medical journal of Australia. 2005; 183 (1): 8-9.

19. Waldram JB, Herring DA, Young TK. Aboriginal health in : historical, cultural, and epidemiological perspectives. Toronto: University of Toronto Press; 1995.