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Megan Vaughan & Kafui Adjaye-Gbewonyo 
Epidemiological Change and Chronic Disease in Sub-Saharan Africa 
Social and historical perspectives

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Cover of Megan Vaughan & Kafui Adjaye-Gbewonyo: Epidemiological Change and Chronic Disease in Sub-Saharan Africa (ePUB)

Epidemiological Change and Chronic Disease in Sub-Saharan Africa offers new and critical perspectives on the causes and consequences of recent epidemiological changes in sub-Saharan Africa, particularly on the increasing incidence of so-called ‘non-communicable’ and chronic conditions. Historians, social anthropologists, public health experts and social epidemiologists present important insights from a number of African perspectives and locations to present an incisive critique of ‘epidemiological transition’ theory and suggest alternative understandings of the epidemiological change on the continent.
Arranged in three parts, ‘Temporalities: Beyond Transition’, ‘Numbers and Categories’ and ‘Local Biologies and Knowledge Systems’, the chapters cover a broad range of subjects and themes, including the trajectory of maternal mortality in East Africa, the African smoking epidemic, the history of sugar consumption in South Africa, causality between infectious and non-communicable diseases in Ghana and Belize, the complex relationships between adult hypertension and paediatric HIV in Botswana, and stories of cancer patients and their families as they pursue treatment and care in Kenya.
In all, the volume provides insights drawn from historical perspectives and from the African social and clinical experience to offer new perspectives on the changing epidemiology of sub-Saharan Africa that go beyond theories of ‘transition’. It will be of value to students and researchers in Global Health, Medical Anthropology and Public Health, and to readers with an interest in African Studies.

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Table of Content

List of figures and tables
List of contributors
Acknowledgements


Introduction Megan Vaughan and Kafui Adjaye-Gbewonyo


Temporalities: Beyond transition
1 The epidemiologic transition turned upside down: Britain’s mortality history as an imaginative resource for Africa Simon Szreter
2 Contingent futures, continuous pasts: experts, activists and social and disease transitions (1950-80’s) Kavita Sivaramakrishna
3 Maternal health, epidemiology and transition theory in Africa Shane Doyle
4 Pathologies of modernisation: epidemiological Imaginaries and the smoking epidemic in post-colonial Africa David Reubi
5 Sugar and diabetes in post-war South Africa Megan Vaughan
Numbers and Categories
6 Validity of measures for chronic disease in African settings Kafui Adjaye-Gbewonyo
7 Estimating and monitoring the burden of non-communicable and chronic disease in Ghana Olutobi Sanuade
Local biologies and knowledge systems: “New diseases” in context
8 The para-communicable: living between infectious and non-communicable conditions Amy Moran-Thomas
9 Translating societies: non-communicable disease and ‘the first 1000 days’ in South Africa Michelle Pentecost
10 In tandem: Breastfeeding knowledge and thinking from Southern Africa Catherine Burns
11 Narrowed passages, Increased pressures: Adult hypertension and paediatric HIV in Botswana Betsey Behr Brada
12 Malignant stories: The chronicity of cancer and the pursuit of care in Kenya Ruth J. Prince


Index

About the author

Marissa Mika is a historian and ethnographer who works on issues where politics, science, technology, medicine intersect in contemporary Africa. She is completing a book on the history of cancer research in Uganda.
Language English ● Format EPUB ● ISBN 9781787357075 ● File size 1.7 MB ● Editor Megan Vaughan & Kafui Adjaye-Gbewonyo ● Publisher UCL Press ● City London ● Country GB ● Published 2021 ● Downloadable 24 months ● Currency EUR ● ID 7711493 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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