The relationship between modernization and blood pressure has been formally examined in anthropology for some 3 decades. A prominent hypothesis to account for the increase in blood pressure in more modernized (or economically developed) communities is the stressful nature of cultural and social change. Research has progressed from hypothesizing that culture change is stressful to trying to operationalize theoretical models of what it is about culture change that is stressful and in turn relating those more precise variables to blood pressure variability within and between communities. Here, I selectively review the literature on modernization and blood pressure, especially the research literature that explicitly uses models of the stress pr...
Stress is one of the most widely utilized medical concepts in modern society. Originally used to des...
The rise in blood pressure with age is a major risk factor for cardiovascular and renal disease, str...
In a world that is so fast pace and always changing, the human biological systems have need to adapt...
The relationship between modernization and blood pressure has been formally examined in anthropology...
In previous research in Brazil, we tested the hypothesis that cultural consonance is associated with...
This study has analyzed the relationships of cross-cultural variation in blood pressure to cultural ...
Decades of research have demonstrated that disease risk varies in relation to culture. Much of this ...
Social psychophysiology is concerned with the interrelationship between emotion, physiology, and the...
Elevated arterial blood pressure varies substantially in relation to social and cultural variables. ...
The health consequences of migration and rapid modernization are examined in the Manus people living...
This study explores the role of social support on blood pressure levels among a sample of immigrants...
The human stress response has been shaped by natural selection to manage acute environmental challen...
Studies in traditional, nonindustrialized countries have shown that blood pressure need not increase...
Blood pressure levels are described for Samoan adults residing in American Samoa and Hawaii. The rel...
Dressler WW. Modernization, stress, and blood pressure: new directions in research. Hum Biol 1999;71...
Stress is one of the most widely utilized medical concepts in modern society. Originally used to des...
The rise in blood pressure with age is a major risk factor for cardiovascular and renal disease, str...
In a world that is so fast pace and always changing, the human biological systems have need to adapt...
The relationship between modernization and blood pressure has been formally examined in anthropology...
In previous research in Brazil, we tested the hypothesis that cultural consonance is associated with...
This study has analyzed the relationships of cross-cultural variation in blood pressure to cultural ...
Decades of research have demonstrated that disease risk varies in relation to culture. Much of this ...
Social psychophysiology is concerned with the interrelationship between emotion, physiology, and the...
Elevated arterial blood pressure varies substantially in relation to social and cultural variables. ...
The health consequences of migration and rapid modernization are examined in the Manus people living...
This study explores the role of social support on blood pressure levels among a sample of immigrants...
The human stress response has been shaped by natural selection to manage acute environmental challen...
Studies in traditional, nonindustrialized countries have shown that blood pressure need not increase...
Blood pressure levels are described for Samoan adults residing in American Samoa and Hawaii. The rel...
Dressler WW. Modernization, stress, and blood pressure: new directions in research. Hum Biol 1999;71...
Stress is one of the most widely utilized medical concepts in modern society. Originally used to des...
The rise in blood pressure with age is a major risk factor for cardiovascular and renal disease, str...
In a world that is so fast pace and always changing, the human biological systems have need to adapt...