A) globalization
B) socioeconomic inequality
C) a highly corrupt government
D) rural development projects
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Multiple Choice
A) be a limitation for doctors working in the remote rural regions of a country
B) be a useful way to convince local governments to provide better medical care
C) help doctors think about health in the broadest possible sense
D) be used to cure diseases in the United States
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Multiple Choice
A) an oral tradition within the medical profession featuring stories and folklore about black women's bodies
B) the formal education health-care professionals received
C) conflicts between physicians of color and white patients
D) information that was the result of Medicaid policies and directives
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Multiple Choice
A) a lack of English language knowledge
B) a shortage of Hmong physicians available to them in U.S. hospitals
C) the absence of housing that permits extended families to live together under one roof
D) a lack of monetary resources to pay for medical care
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Multiple Choice
A) poor hygiene practices that gave rise to a unique type of food poisoning
B) the reappearance of a rare genetic anomaly that was first brought to the area by Europeans
C) the funeral rituals used by the population she studied
D) the rejection of Western medicine by the local chiefs of the population
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Multiple Choice
A) husband and wife
B) heaven and Earth
C) past and present
D) the body and Earth
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Multiple Choice
A) They are a key part of the definition.
B) They do not address the problem of unequal access to health care.
C) They result in complete physical, mental, and social well-being.
D) They are not part of the definition.
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Multiple Choice
A) the scientific means to diagnose a disease
B) social experiences as a component of disease
C) pharmacology as a means of understanding diseases
D) recognizing that biology plays a crucial role in disease
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Essay
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Multiple Choice
A) It is the most common point of access for people worldwide.
B) It is the least common point of access for most people worldwide.
C) It is the least frequently contested aspect of health care worldwide.
D) It is the most frequently contested aspect of health-care delivery worldwide.
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Essay
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Essay
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Multiple Choice
A) Women are viewed as strong and capable actors in the birth process.
B) Expectant mothers are attended by midwives and family members.
C) Fathers are expected to hold the mothers while encouraging them.
D) Mothers can receive epidural injections to manage their pain.
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Multiple Choice
A) to assist in documenting a major health scandal
B) to better understand the relationship between health and culture
C) to advance the field of sports medicine
D) to uncover hidden problems with football
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Multiple Choice
A) Her parents were eventually able to bridge the gap between their own medical prognosis and that of Lia's doctors.
B) Her doctors were ultimately able to successfully construct her parents' illness narrative.
C) The clash between the family's beliefs and those of the physicians was a clear instance of medical pluralism.
D) The entire event provided a window into the application of non-Western medicine that is difficult to document in the field.
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Multiple Choice
A) promoting ethnopharmacology
B) promoting biomedicine
C) epidemiology
D) local knowledge
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Multiple Choice
A) microsystem
B) human ecosystem
C) microbiome
D) biodome
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