Trevathan et al., Chapter 1, References cited Aaby, P. (1995). Assumptions and contradictions in measles and measles immunization research: Is measles good for something? Social Science and Medicine, 41(5), 673-686. Adair, L.S., Kuzawa, C.W., & Borja, J. (2001). Maternal energy stores and diet composition during pregnancy program adolescent blood pressure. Circulation, 104(9), 1034-1039. Allison, A.C. (1953). The sickle-cell trait in the mediterranean area. Man, 53, 23-24. Allison, A.C. (1954a). The distribution of the sickle-cell trait in east africa and elsewhere, and its apparent relationship to the incidence of subtertian malaria. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 48, 312-318. Allison, A.C. (1954b). Notes on sickle-cell polymorphism. Annal of Human Genetics, 19, 39-57. Allison, A.C. (1954c). Protection afforded by sickel-cell trait against subtertian malarial infection. British Medical Journal, 1, 290-294. Allison, A.C., Ikin, E.W., & Mourant, A.E. (1954). Further observations on blood groups in east african tribes. The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 84(1/2), 158-162. Anonymous. (1993). Evolving answers. The Economist, 79-80. Bangham, C., Anderson, R., Baquero, F., Bax, R., Hastings, I., Koella, J., & al., e. (1999). Evolution of infectious diseases: The impact of vaccines, drugs, and social factors. In S. Stearns (Ed.), Evolution in health and disease (pp. 152-160). New York: Oxford University Press.
Barker DJ. (1997). Fetal nutrition and cardiovascular disease in later life. British Medical Bulletin, 53, 96-108. Begley, S. (1993). The flintstone diagnosis. Newsweek, 121(19), 62-63. Blurton Jones, N., Hawkes, K., & O'Connell, J.F. (2002). Antiquity of postreproductive life: Are there modern impacts on hunter-gatherer postreproductive life spans? American Journal of Human Biology, 14, 184-205. Cordain, L. (1999). Cereal grains: Humanity's double-edged sword. World Review of Nutrition and Diet, 84, 19-73. Cordain, L. (2002). The paleo diet: Lose weight and get healthy by eating the food you were designed to eat. New York: John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Darwin, E. (1796). Zoonomia; or the laws of organic life. [with plates.]: 2 vol. J. Johnson: London, 1794. Eaton, S., & Konner, M. (1985). Paleolithic nutrition: A consideration of its nature and current implications. New England Journal of Medicine, 312, 283-289. Eaton, S., Konner, M., & Shotak, M. (1988a). Stone agers in the fast lane: Chronic degenerative diseases in evolutionary perspective. American Journal of Medicine, 84, 739-749. Eaton, S., Pike, M., Short, R., Lee, N., Trussell, J., Hatcher, R., Wood, J., Worthman, C.M., Blurton Jones, N., Konner, M., Hill, K., Bailey, R., & Hurtado, A. (1994). Women's reproductive cancers in evolutionary context. Quarterly Review of Biology, 69, 353-367. Eaton, S., Shostak, M., & Konner, M. (1988b). The paleolithic prescription: A program of diet, exercise and a design for living. New York: Harper and Row.
Eaton, S.B., Eaton III, S.B., & Konner, M.J. (1999). Paleolithic nutrition revisited. In W.R. Trevathan, E.O. Smith & J.J. McKenna (Eds.), Evolutionary medicine (pp. 313-332). New York: Oxford University Press. Eaton, S.B., & Eaton, S.B.I. (1999). Breast cancer in evolutionary perspective. In W.R. Trevathan, E.O. Smith & J.J. McKenna (Eds.), Evolutionary medicine (pp. 429-442). New York: Oxford University Press. Ewald, P.W. (1994). Evolution of infectious disease. New York: Oxford University Press. Ewald, P.W. (1999a). Evolutionary control of hiv and other sexually transmitted viruses. In W.R. Trevathan, E.O. Smith & J.J. McKenna (Eds.), Evolutionary medicine (pp. 271-312). New York: Oxford University Press. Ewald, P.W. (1999b). Using evolution as a tool for controlling infectious disease. In W.R. Trevathan, E.O. Smith & J.J. McKenna (Eds.), Evolutionary medicine (pp. 245-270). New York: Oxford University Press. Ezzell, C. (1993). Darwin takes on mainstream medicine. The Journal of NIH Research, 5, 64-66. Flaxman, S., & Sherman, P. (2000). Morning sickness: A mechanism for protecting mother and embryo. The Quarterly Review of Biology, 75, 113-148. Furneaux, E., Langley-Evans, A., & Langley-Evans, S. (2001). Nausea and vomiting of pregnancy: Endocrine basis and contribution to pregnancy outcome. Obstetrical and Gynecological Survey, 56, 775-782. Goldsmith, M.F. (1993). Ancestors may provide clinical answers, say 'darwinian' medical evolutionists. JAMA, 269(12), 1477-1480. Goscienski, P.J. (2005). Health secrets of the stone age: What we can learn from deep in prehistory to become leaner, livelier, and longer-lived. Oceanside, CA: Goscienski, Philip J.
Hill, A.V.S., & Motulsky, A.G. (1999). Genetic variation and human disease: The role of natural selection. In S. Stearns (Ed.), Evolution in health and disease (pp. 50-61). New York: Oxford University Press. Hill, A.V.S., Sanchez-Mazas, A., Barbujani, G., Dunston, G., Escoffier, L., Hancock, J., & al., e. (1999). Human genetic variation and its impact on public health and medicine. In S. Stearns (Ed.), Evolution in health and disease (pp. 62-74). New York: Oxford University Press. Holmes, E.C. (1999). Molecular phylogenies and the genetic structure of viral populations. In S. Stearns (Ed.), Evolution in health and disease (pp. 173-182). New York: Oxford University Press. Kluger, M., Kozak, W., Conn, C., Leon, L., & Soszynski, D. (1998). Role of fever in disease. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 856, 224-233. Knapp, L.A. (2002). Evolution and immunology. Evolutionary Anthropology, Suppl 1, 140-144. Kuzawa, C.W. (2005). The fetal origins of developmental plasticity: Are maternal cues reliable predictors of future nutritional environments? American Journal of Human Biology, 17(1), 5-21. Kwiatkowski, D.P. (2005). How malaria has affected the human genome and what human genetics can teach us about malaria. American Journal of Human Genetics, 77, 171-192. Livingstone, F.B. (1958). Anthropological implications of sickle cell gene distribution in west africa. American Anthropologist, 60(3), 533-562. McKeown, T. (1998). Determinants of health. In P.J. Brown (Ed.), Understanding and applying medical anthropology (pp. 70-76). Mountain View, CA: Mayfield Publishing Company.
McLean, A. (1999). Development and use of vaccines against evolving pathogens: Vaccine design. In S. Stearns (Ed.), Evolution in health and disease (pp. 138-151). New York: Oxford University Press. Miller, S.K. (1993). Diseases that hark back to stone age lifestyle. New Scientist(1862), 10. Morton, D.J. (1926). The relation of evolution to medicine. Science, 64(1660), 394-396. Nesse, R.M., & Williams, G.C. (1994). Why we get sick. The new science of darwinian medicine. New York: Vintage Books. Newton, P., & White, N. (1999). Malaria: New developments in treatment and prevention. Annual Review of Medicine, 50, 179-192. Peacock, N. (1990). Comparative and cross-cultural approaches to the study of human female reproductive failture. In C.J. DeRousseau (Ed.), Primate life histoyr and evolution (pp. 195-220). New York: Wiley-Liss. Pike, I. (2000). The nutritional consequences of pregnancy sickness: A critique of a hypothesis. Human Nature, 11, 207-232. Profet, M. (1992). Pregnancy sickness as adaptation: A deterrent t maternal ingestion of teratogens. In J.H. Barkow, L. Cosmides & J. Tooby (Eds.), The adapted mind: Evolutionary psychology and the generation of culture (pp. 327-365). New York: Oxford University Press. Read, A.F., Aaby, P., Antia, R., Ebert, D., Ewald, P.W., Gupta, S., & al., e. (1999). What can evolutionary biology contribute to understanding virulence? In S. Stearns (Ed.), Evolution in health and disease (pp. 205-215). New York: Oxford University Press. Rosenberg, K. (1992). The evolution of modern human childbirth. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology, 35, 89-124.
Rosenberg, K., & Trevathan, W.R. (1996). Bipedalism and human birth: The obstetrical dilemma revisited. Evolutionary Anthropology, 4, 161-168. Rosenberg, K., & Trevathan, W.R. (2002). Birth, obstetrics and human evolution. BJOG: an International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 109, 1199-1206. Samson, M., Libert, F., Doranz, B.J., Rucker, J., Liesnard, C., Farber, C.-M., & al., e. (1996). Resistance to hiv-1 infection in caucasian individuals bearing mutant alleles of the ccr-5 chemokine receptor gene. Nature, 382, 722-725. Simoons, F.J. (1981). Celiac disease as a geographic problem. In D. Walcher & N. Kretchmer (Eds.), Food, nutrition, and evolution (pp. 179-199). New York: Masson Publishing Company. Somer, E. (2001). The origin diet: How eating like our stone age ancestors will maximize your health. New York: Henry Holt. Strassman, B., & Dunbar, R. (1999). Human evolution and disease: Putting the stone age in perspective. In S. SC (Ed.), Evolution in health and disease (pp. 91-101). New York: Oxford University Press. Trevathan, W.R. (1987). Human birth: An evolutionary perspective. Hawthorne, NY: Aldine DeGruyter. Trevathan, W.R. (1999). Evolutionary obstetrics. In W.R. Trevathan, E.O. Smith & J.J. McKenna (Eds.), Evolutionary medicine (pp. 183-208). New York: Oxford University Press. Weinberg, E. (1978). Iron and infection. Microbiological Reviews, 42(1), 45-66. Weinberg, G., Friis, H., Boelaert, J., & Weinberg, E. (2001). Iron status and the severity of hiv infection in pregnant women. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 33, 2098-2100.
Williams, G., & Nesse, R. (1991). The dawn of darwinian medicine. The Quarterly Review of Biology, 66, 1-22.