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CIRCLE WITH A DOT

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  3. Question for people who know science.

Question for people who know science.

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blackmastodonscience
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  • davidnjoku@mastodon.worldD davidnjoku@mastodon.world

    @mekkaokereke That's scary. I remember, for instance, when my wife was pregnant that the doctors regularly made certain adjustments based on the fact that she's Black. 'Luckily' she's of Nigerian heritage, but I think you're saying that if she was of, say, Namibian origin they might be applying incorrect metrics to her.

    (I know there's a lot more than just that to being a doctor, but you get what I'm saying.)

    @weddige @davep

    mekkaokereke@hachyderm.ioM This user is from outside of this forum
    mekkaokereke@hachyderm.ioM This user is from outside of this forum
    mekkaokereke@hachyderm.io
    wrote last edited by
    #38

    @davidnjoku @weddige @davep

    Yeah, and even with the knowledge that she is Nigerian, US medical stuff causes us to get worse care and be mistreated to death.

    My dad keeps a lot of his Black patients alive, because he was trained in Nigeria, London, and the US, and knows all the ways that US healthcare provides worse care to Black people.

    PulseOx readings are wrong for us. Skin diseases present differently. Bodyweight and birth weight readings are different. BMI charts, which are bad for everyone, are especially wrong for us. Pain is often ignored, or considered to be faking. Expensive treatments and tests are under-prescribed. Etc.

    If you're going to have a baby in the US and you are Black? Even if you are wealthy? Get a doctor that understands how US medicine can fail Black patients. The doctor doesn't have to be Black. They just have to care enough to have looked into these differences.

    davidnjoku@mastodon.worldD sharksonaplane@mastodon.sandwich.netS 2 Replies Last reply
    0
    • C carl@chaos.social

      @topher1kenobe the risk factor for heart disease is racism, not race. There have been papers on that. @davidnjoku @PurpleJillybeans

      topher1kenobe@fosstodon.orgT This user is from outside of this forum
      topher1kenobe@fosstodon.orgT This user is from outside of this forum
      topher1kenobe@fosstodon.org
      wrote last edited by
      #39

      @carl @davidnjoku @PurpleJillybeans ah, that’s great to know! Thanks a bunch.

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • mekkaokereke@hachyderm.ioM mekkaokereke@hachyderm.io

        @davidnjoku @weddige @davep

        Yeah, and even with the knowledge that she is Nigerian, US medical stuff causes us to get worse care and be mistreated to death.

        My dad keeps a lot of his Black patients alive, because he was trained in Nigeria, London, and the US, and knows all the ways that US healthcare provides worse care to Black people.

        PulseOx readings are wrong for us. Skin diseases present differently. Bodyweight and birth weight readings are different. BMI charts, which are bad for everyone, are especially wrong for us. Pain is often ignored, or considered to be faking. Expensive treatments and tests are under-prescribed. Etc.

        If you're going to have a baby in the US and you are Black? Even if you are wealthy? Get a doctor that understands how US medicine can fail Black patients. The doctor doesn't have to be Black. They just have to care enough to have looked into these differences.

        davidnjoku@mastodon.worldD This user is from outside of this forum
        davidnjoku@mastodon.worldD This user is from outside of this forum
        davidnjoku@mastodon.world
        wrote last edited by
        #40

        @mekkaokereke Wow, that thing you just said about BMI has answered a question I've had for close to 20 years! I'm tall and kinda skinny - but my BMI has always put me down as overweight.

        Should've guessed that it's because I'm Black! 🙂

        @weddige @davep

        processparsnip@mastodon.ieP 1 Reply Last reply
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        • davidnjoku@mastodon.worldD davidnjoku@mastodon.world

          Question for people who know science.

          I know that race is a social construct. The fact that I'm 'Black' has no meaning beyond my melanin levels. It doesn't, for instance, make me a better rapper than you. Culture might, but melanin doesn't.

          So why are there medical differences between races? Black women have more fibroids, & have their babies a week earlier than white women. And Black men are more prone to type 2 diabetes.

          Why's that? Culture? Racism? Something else?

          #blackmastodon #science

          jmopp@masto.aiJ This user is from outside of this forum
          jmopp@masto.aiJ This user is from outside of this forum
          jmopp@masto.ai
          wrote last edited by
          #41

          @davidnjoku One of the examples of a race-based health trait that people mention is sickle-cell trait. But this is an adaptation to malaria, and parts of Africa which do not have malaria, like most of South Africa, so not have sickle-cell trait to the same extent as Africans closer to the equator

          davidnjoku@mastodon.worldD 1 Reply Last reply
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          • mekkaokereke@hachyderm.ioM mekkaokereke@hachyderm.io

            @weddige @davidnjoku @davep

            If the only Asians in America were from Tonga, Samoa and Hawaii? Then US medical textbooks would make all kinds of horrifically wrong conclusions about Asian people and health risks.🤷🏿‍♂️

            They'd apply outlier observations to billions of people.

            That's what happens to Black people. Not quite as extreme, but same principle.

            jsdodge@fediscience.orgJ This user is from outside of this forum
            jsdodge@fediscience.orgJ This user is from outside of this forum
            jsdodge@fediscience.org
            wrote last edited by
            #42

            @mekkaokereke @weddige @davidnjoku @davep

            After reading over this interesting thread, there’s a point that you and others raise that is worth making explicit: individual humans are shaped by their genes, their physical environment, and their cultural environment, so it often doesn’t make sense to say that one is more important than the others. The problem with the idea of race is not that genes play no role at all in human development, nor that traits that we associate with race have no correlation whatsoever with other traits. The problem is that the traits we choose to associate with race are socially determined, arbitrary, and not much use for classifying the genetic diversity of humans.

            A good source on this topic is Richard Lewontin, who did foundational work in establishing the science of human genetic diversity and was a committed public intellectual. The link here is to a series of lectures that were published under the title, “Biology as Ideology.”

            https://www.cbc.ca/ideas/mobile/touch/massey-archives/1990/11/07/1990-massey-lectures-biology-as-ideology/

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            • davidnjoku@mastodon.worldD davidnjoku@mastodon.world

              @davep That's a good point. But there are a billion Black people, and we're genetically more diverse than all of the rest of the world put together, so it's a bit strange (to my non-scientific mind) that there'll be traits that affect all of us.

              jmopp@masto.aiJ This user is from outside of this forum
              jmopp@masto.aiJ This user is from outside of this forum
              jmopp@masto.ai
              wrote last edited by
              #43

              @davidnjoku @davep That's the thing: I don't think it could be said that [insert race-based trait here] affects all billion Black people. The fact that Black populations in Western Hemisphere are mostly descended from West Africans causes a sampling bias

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • jmopp@masto.aiJ jmopp@masto.ai

                @davidnjoku One of the examples of a race-based health trait that people mention is sickle-cell trait. But this is an adaptation to malaria, and parts of Africa which do not have malaria, like most of South Africa, so not have sickle-cell trait to the same extent as Africans closer to the equator

                davidnjoku@mastodon.worldD This user is from outside of this forum
                davidnjoku@mastodon.worldD This user is from outside of this forum
                davidnjoku@mastodon.world
                wrote last edited by
                #44

                @jmopp Yes, I should've thought of that. My ex has sickle cell disorder and we've spent many, many days in ICU.

                But as a result, my kids are less likely than me to catch malaria. Which is nice for them, cos malaria isn't fun.

                Everyone says sickle cell is a Black thing, but you're right, people from your part of the continent don't have it as much as we do.

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • davidnjoku@mastodon.worldD davidnjoku@mastodon.world

                  @mekkaokereke Wow, that thing you just said about BMI has answered a question I've had for close to 20 years! I'm tall and kinda skinny - but my BMI has always put me down as overweight.

                  Should've guessed that it's because I'm Black! 🙂

                  @weddige @davep

                  processparsnip@mastodon.ieP This user is from outside of this forum
                  processparsnip@mastodon.ieP This user is from outside of this forum
                  processparsnip@mastodon.ie
                  wrote last edited by
                  #45

                  @mekkaokereke

                  agree, BMI is such a eugenic crock.
                  Thank you for pointing out the extreme over-generalizations of Black health! TIL

                  @davidnjoku

                  Genetics is not my field, but AFAICT people who survive major traumas like chattel slavery, terrorist attacks, and genocide, and then become pregnant pass on epigenetic changes to their children.

                  So imo that's in the mix along with present medical racism and increased environmental exposure to carcinogens and fresh veg access.

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • davidnjoku@mastodon.worldD davidnjoku@mastodon.world

                    Question for people who know science.

                    I know that race is a social construct. The fact that I'm 'Black' has no meaning beyond my melanin levels. It doesn't, for instance, make me a better rapper than you. Culture might, but melanin doesn't.

                    So why are there medical differences between races? Black women have more fibroids, & have their babies a week earlier than white women. And Black men are more prone to type 2 diabetes.

                    Why's that? Culture? Racism? Something else?

                    #blackmastodon #science

                    mensrea@freeradical.zoneM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mensrea@freeradical.zoneM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mensrea@freeradical.zone
                    wrote last edited by
                    #46

                    @davidnjoku the are genetic traits for some regions, ie. central africa tends to higher rates of sickle cell anima as the same mutation gives a resistance to malaria. what you're talking about is mostly racism though

                    1 Reply Last reply
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                    • davidnjoku@mastodon.worldD davidnjoku@mastodon.world

                      Question for people who know science.

                      I know that race is a social construct. The fact that I'm 'Black' has no meaning beyond my melanin levels. It doesn't, for instance, make me a better rapper than you. Culture might, but melanin doesn't.

                      So why are there medical differences between races? Black women have more fibroids, & have their babies a week earlier than white women. And Black men are more prone to type 2 diabetes.

                      Why's that? Culture? Racism? Something else?

                      #blackmastodon #science

                      ckd@mas.toC This user is from outside of this forum
                      ckd@mas.toC This user is from outside of this forum
                      ckd@mas.to
                      wrote last edited by
                      #47

                      @davidnjoku
                      It's just genetics.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • C carl@chaos.social

                        @davep lactose tolerante into adulthood appeared in a couple of African peoples first. @davidnjoku

                        davep@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
                        davep@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
                        davep@infosec.exchange
                        wrote last edited by
                        #48

                        @carl @davidnjoku
                        Interesting, thanks. I guess the trait must have spontaneously become prevalent in various pastoral peoples.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • C carl@chaos.social

                          @davidnjoku UK or the US whites need to talk about races. Their identity is build on not being Black. They need Black people for their whiteness. Of course forgetting that they themselves are human, too, even without Black people. @weddige @davep

                          davep@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
                          davep@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
                          davep@infosec.exchange
                          wrote last edited by
                          #49

                          @carl @davidnjoku @weddige

                          UK? Not really. I think it's so crazy in the USA because of the whole colonialist mentality, manifest destiny etc. The peasants/working class of England were the template for the aristocracy to do even worse things around the world. And they still own 3 to 4 times more land than everybody else put together. It's an insanely hierarchical society.

                          1 Reply Last reply
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                          • mekkaokereke@hachyderm.ioM mekkaokereke@hachyderm.io

                            @davidnjoku @weddige @davep

                            Yeah, and even with the knowledge that she is Nigerian, US medical stuff causes us to get worse care and be mistreated to death.

                            My dad keeps a lot of his Black patients alive, because he was trained in Nigeria, London, and the US, and knows all the ways that US healthcare provides worse care to Black people.

                            PulseOx readings are wrong for us. Skin diseases present differently. Bodyweight and birth weight readings are different. BMI charts, which are bad for everyone, are especially wrong for us. Pain is often ignored, or considered to be faking. Expensive treatments and tests are under-prescribed. Etc.

                            If you're going to have a baby in the US and you are Black? Even if you are wealthy? Get a doctor that understands how US medicine can fail Black patients. The doctor doesn't have to be Black. They just have to care enough to have looked into these differences.

                            sharksonaplane@mastodon.sandwich.netS This user is from outside of this forum
                            sharksonaplane@mastodon.sandwich.netS This user is from outside of this forum
                            sharksonaplane@mastodon.sandwich.net
                            wrote last edited by
                            #50

                            @mekkaokereke @davidnjoku And in addition to all of that, there's the aftereffects of systemic racism throwing Black communities under the bus of all kinds of hideous environmental harms for decades. There are ofc a lot of examples in the U.S., but this also happens in mining and manufacturing areas all across Africa, and some of that may have genetic implications we don't even know about yet. It's a fair bet the same thing's happened in the UK and they just haven't bothered to research it yet.

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