Department of Political Science and Indigenous Learning; Lakehead University; Thunder Bay, Ontario, CN.
Ethn Dis. 2018 Aug 9;28(Suppl 1):247-252. doi: 10.18865/ed.28.S1.247. eCollection 2018.
The purpose of this study was to analyze the extent to which the 'thrifty gene hypothesis' remains embedded within regimes of Canadian health care. The thrifty gene hypothesis, formulated by the American geneticist and travelling scientist James V. Neel in 1962, proposed that Indigenous peoples were genetically predisposed to Type 2 diabetes due to the foodways of their ancestors. The hypothesis was functionally racist and based on what biological anthropologists now call 'the myth of forager food insecurity.' Importantly, Neel reconsidered his own hypothesis in 1982 before he ultimately rejected it in 1999; nonetheless, in the mid-1990s, a team of Canadian scientists led by the endocrinologist Robert Hegele of Western University conducted a genetic study on the OjiCree community of Sandy Lake First Nation in northern Ontario. Thereafter, Hegele told the academic world and news media that he had discovered a thrifty gene in Sandy Lake. Like Neel, Hegele later came to reject his own study in 2011. Nonetheless, the 'thrifty gene hypothesis' and Hegele's Sandy Lake study continue to be cited, referenced, and reproduced in the current Clinical Guidelines of the Canadian Diabetes Association, as well as across state-related health literature more broadly. The purpose of this study, then, will be to apply the PHCRP to the thrifty gene hypothesis in a Canadian context.
本研究旨在分析“节俭基因假说”在加拿大医疗保健体系中所嵌入的程度。“节俭基因假说”由美国遗传学家兼旅行科学家詹姆斯·V·尼尔(James V. Neel)于 1962 年提出,该假说认为,由于其祖先的饮食方式,原住民易患 2 型糖尿病。这一假说在功能上具有种族主义色彩,其依据是生物人类学家现在所称的“觅食者食物不安全的神话”。重要的是,尼尔在 1982 年重新考虑了自己的假说,最终在 1999 年否定了它;尽管如此,在 20 世纪 90 年代中期,由西安大略大学内分泌学家罗伯特·赫格尔(Robert Hegele)领导的一组加拿大科学家对安大略省北部桑迪湖第一民族的奥吉克里社区进行了一项基因研究。此后,赫格尔告诉学术界和新闻媒体,他在桑迪湖发现了一个节俭基因。和尼尔一样,赫格尔后来在 2011 年也否定了自己的研究。尽管如此,“节俭基因假说”和赫格尔的桑迪湖研究仍在加拿大糖尿病协会的临床指南以及更广泛的州相关健康文献中被引用、参考和复制。因此,本研究的目的将是在加拿大背景下应用 PHCRP 分析节俭基因假说。