(Print) Use this randomly generated list as your call list when playing the game. There is no need to say the BINGO column name. Place some kind of mark (like an X, a checkmark, a dot, tally mark, etc) on each cell as you announce it, to keep track. You can also cut out each item, place them in a bag and pull words from the bag.
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A subfield of anthropology
that focuses on health,
disease and illness, the
cultural dimensions of
health definitions and
experiences, and the
cultural construction of
medical systems.
An approach to medical
anthropology
that analyzes how culture and
environment
interact to create conditions for
health and
disease.
Medical anthro-
pology focused on the ways
inequalities of
power, economics, and social
structures shape
practices and understandings of
health and
healing
Used critical
anthropology
in developing
its programs
A term applied in
biomedi-
cal contexts to forms of
medical interventions
considered outside
mainstream scientific
practices.
Culturally specific
approaches to
illness, health, and
healing found around
the
world
An affliction suffered by
certain groups of
people who use specific
cultural tools to deal
with and explain their
symptoms, the sus-
pected causal agents, and
preferred treatment.
A culture-bound syndrome
in Central and
South America, believed to
be caused by soul
separation, resulting from a
sudden or trau-
matic fright.
The disease
that was in
Haiti
An abnormal condition
afflicting the body.
stemming from a
pathogenic cause
The study of the
incidence,
distribu-
tion, and spread
of disease in a
population.
Chiropractic care &
naturopathy
Medical anthropol-
ogy specifically
applied toward the
improve-
ment of health
outcomes and
practical results.
The state of
unwellness, or
the subjective
interpretation of
symptoms and
suffering.
Another name for
culture-bound
syndrome
Cultural
conceptions of a
condition held
by a population
Classified
as a
disease
Examples
of culture-
bound
syndrome
A svstem of categorization. A.
applied
to medical anthropology, the
was conditions
synoromes, or processes art
grouped vis-à-vis
medical knowledge.
Who had one
of the first
cases of
asymptomatic
typhus
The process by which a particu-
lar physical ailment, experience, or process
becomes understood as properly being in the
realm of medicine, as it is understood in a par-
ticular society.
You shall not maxo any gashes in you
flesh for the dead or tattoo any marks
upon you: I am the lord your God
Susto
A view of medicine
that understands
disease as having
a unique physical
cause
within the body.