The relationship between diet and those diseases caused by, or related
to, poor nutrition is influenced by anthropological and physiological
factors. This volume, first published in 1990 and based on a symposium
organised in collaboration with the International Commission on the
Anthropology of Food, emphasises the importance of an interdisciplinary
approach to the study of diet and disease. Distinguished contributors,
from nutritionists to anthropologists, examine the ways in which
nutrition may affect sociocultural circumstances and how the causation
and distribution of disease is linked to anthropological factors.
Amongst the topics addressed are the extent to which human beings can
adapt to food shortage, how nutritional factors affect people's capacity
to work and develop properly mentally, how nutritional status influences
susceptibility to infectious disease, who is most at risk in the
community and why, the relationship between environment, economy and
malnutrition and how people perceive food in relation to health. This
research level text will interest both nutritionists and
anthropologists.