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6 - Comparative Perspectives on Reproductive Health in Ladakh

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2009

Andrea S. Wiley
Affiliation:
James Madison University, Virginia
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Summary

The previous two chapters described a number of striking features of reproductive health in Ladakh. Some result from the ecology of this mountainous region, while others derive from the social and cultural forms extant in Ladakh in the 1990s. Aspects of these are unique to Ladakh, but many are common to the Himalayan culture area. In addition, some derive from similar social and historical processes of the Indian subcontinent. Hence, the significance of the Ladakhi material is highlighted by three comparisons: (1) mountain populations from the New World that share a similar mountain ecology, for which there are extensive data; (2) other Himalayan populations that share ecology, social organization, and cultural traditions, albeit with different historical trajectories; and (3) other populations in India, with which Ladakh shares some infrastructural similarities and social trends. Each of these three comparisons provides different ways of understanding the possible roots of the reproductive health situation observed in Ladakh.

Comparisons focus on the significant aspects of maternal and child health in Ladakh, and include birthweight and Ponderal Index; maternal biology; diet and work patterns during pregnancy; neonatal and infant mortality rates and their relationship to patterns of morbidity; child care and gender differentials in health and survival; and household and family dynamics.

Type
Chapter
Information
An Ecology of High-Altitude Infancy
A Biocultural Perspective
, pp. 146 - 177
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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