[FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif]The latest American Journal of Human Biology contains details of two studies that contend that poor nutrition and stress - stemming back to the days of slavery - could help explain black-white differences in cardiovascular health in the United States.[/FONT][FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif] In one study, researchers from Northwestern University explain how nutrients and hormones present in the womb can profoundly shape a fetus's development, in part by silencing certain genes. These influences, say the research team, can persist into later life to impact adult health, a process known as "fetal programming." The researchers argue that such intergenerational impacts of environmental factors could help explain racial health differences. [/FONT] [FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif] "A pregnant African American mother's experience of well documented stressors, including social forces such as discrimination and racism, could have lingering effects on diseases like hypertension, diabetes and heart attacks in her children," says Christopher Kuzawa and Elizabeth Sweet, who co-authored the article. By synthesizing this new evidence, they argue that social forces, rather than genes, may underlie the problem of racial inequity in heart attacks and strokes.[/FONT] [FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif] In a related editorial in the journal, Peter Ellison explains that some of the most persistent health disparities in the United States occur between African Americans and European Americans. The causes of those disparities are many and their roots are deep. They are entwined with the history of slavery and discrimination, with rural and inner city neglect, with differential wealth and differential access to health care, with cultural traditions and cultural biases, according to Ellison.[/FONT] [FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif] The second study examines why the average birth weight among African-American babies is approximately 250 grams lower than the average birth weight of whites - a difference of 10 percent. According to Grazyna Jasienska, co-author of the study, this may also be the result of conditions experienced by their ancestors during the period of slavery passed through epigenetic, rather than genetic, mechanisms.[/FONT] [FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif] Interestingly, prior studies have shown that contemporary black women who were born in African countries ancestral to slave populations, but who live in the U.S., give birth to children with significantly higher weight than black women in the U.S. who have slave ancestry. "Slaves experienced poor nutrition during all stages of life, suffered from a heavy burden of infectious diseases and, in addition, experienced high energetic costs of hard physical labor," says Jasienska. "Even a short-term nutritional deprivation of pregnant women, when very severe, has been shown to have an intergenerational effect."[/FONT] [FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif] The fetal programming concept suggests that physiology and metabolism, including growth and fat accumulation of the developing fetus, and, thus its birth weight, depend on intergenerational signal of environmental quality passed through generations of matrilinear ancestors. A child's birth weight may be influenced by nutritional conditions of its grandmother and even great-grandmother. The resulting effects can be seen in both childhood and adulthood, and include a higher risk of hypertension, diabetes and cardiovascular disease, contends Jasienska. [/FONT] [FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif] Jasienska says that in the U.S. the condition of many slaves did not immediately improve after the abolition of slavery, so the causes are not as far removed in time from contemporary African Americans as it may seem. Census data from the year 1900 showed that African Americans continued to suffer higher mortality than whites from all major diseases except cancer. Even though several generations have passed since then, it may not have been enough time to eliminate the negative impact of slavery on the health of the contemporary African-American population. [/FONT]
Interesting. This needs more research. I have always wondered if legacies like slavery have a generational component in the minds of people affected by it. We have seen one historical consequence of slavery and that is in the great northern migration of blacks from the South to the North in the last century. This radically changed urban America in so many ways. The legacy of the South left it's imprint on blacks through the denial of education and robbed blacks of that entrepreneur spirit to have their own self-sufficent communities like other immigrants of the time. Though black immigrants like the Jamacians and other blacks from the caribbean were the exception.
Ive known about the psychological legacy being left But not the physical legacy The U.S was different,because not only did you have slavery,but Jim Crowe Laws also. I think its impossible that Blacks could have left from slavery physically unscathed though.Slave masters gave slaves nothing but unhealthy food,with little regard to the slaves health.Slaves of course had higher death rates. Centuries of eating nothing but unhealthy foods.... This is why lots of African Americans have diabetes,heart disease,etc intheir family going back generations