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Vol.
23, No. 3 1999
SPECIAL
EDITION
DISEASE, HEALTH, AND SURVIVIAL AMONG NATIVE AMERICANS
Articles
- Introduction
by Clifford E. Trafzer and Diane Weiner
- The
Urban Tradition by Jack ForbesThe Embodiment of a Working
Identity: Power and Process in Rarámuri Ritual Healing
by Jerome M. Levi
- Blood
Came from Their Mouths: Tongva and Chumash Responses to
the Pandemic of 1801 by Edward D. Castillo
- Removing
the Heart of the Choctaw People: Indian Removal from a Native
Perspective by Donna L. Akers
- Infant
Mortality on the Yakama Indian Reservation, 1914-1964 by
Clifford E. Trafzer
- "In
the Fall of the Year We Were Troubled with Some Sickness":
Typhoid Fever Deaths, Sherman Institute, 1904 by Jean A.
Keller
- Blinded
with Science: American Indians, the Office of Indian Affairs,
and the Federal Campaign against Trachoma, 1924-1927 by
Todd Benson
- American
Indian Views of Public Health Nursing, 1930-1950 by Nancy
Reifel
- Ethnogenetics:
Interpreting Ideas about Diabetes and Inheritance by Diane
Weiner
- Applying
Medical Anthropology: Developing Diabetes Education and
Prevention Programs in American Indian Cultures by Brooke
Olson
- American
Indian Breast Cancer Project: Educational Development and
Implementation by Felicia Schanche Hodge and John Casken
- American
Indian and Alaska Native Cancer Data Issues by Linda Burhansstipanov,
James W. Hampton, and Martha J. Tenney
- The
Origins of Navajo Youth Gangs by Eric Henderson, Stephen
J. Kunitz, and Jerrold E. Levy
- Self-Sufficiency,
Personal Empowerment, and Community Revitalization: The
Impact of a Leadership Program on American Indians in the
Southwest by Jeanette Hassin and Robert S. Young
- Helplessness,
Hopelessness, and Despair: Identifying the Precursors to
Indian Youth Suicide by Troy Johnson and Holly Tomren
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