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Original Articles

Ecology of Childhood Disease in the Karamojong of Uganda

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Pages 25-36 | Received 27 Aug 1963, Published online: 29 Apr 2013

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V. Raschke, U. Oltersdorf, I. Elmadfa, M. L. Wahlqvist, A. Kouris-Blazos & B. Cheema. (2008) Investigation of the Dietary Intake and Health Status in East Africa in the 1960s: A Systematic Review of the Historic Oltersdorf Collection . Ecology of Food and Nutrition 47:1, pages 1-43.
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Articles from other publishers (18)

Sandra Gray & Mary B. Sundal. (2017) “Milk Has Gone”: Dietary Change and Human Adaptability in Karamoja, Uganda. American Anthropologist 119:4, pages 662-683.
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John EdingtonJohn Edington. 2017. Indigenous Environmental Knowledge. Indigenous Environmental Knowledge 47 68 .
Ambrose O Talisuna, Abdisalan M Noor, Albert P Okui & Robert W Snow. (2015) The past, present and future use of epidemiological intelligence to plan malaria vector control and parasite prevention in Uganda. Malaria Journal 14:1.
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Sandra Gray. 2012. Handbook of Growth and Growth Monitoring in Health and Disease. Handbook of Growth and Growth Monitoring in Health and Disease 681 708 .
Kelsey Needham Dancause, Helen A. Akol & Sandra J. Gray. (2010) Beer is the cattle of women: Sorghum beer commercialization and dietary intake of agropastoral families in Karamoja, Uganda. Social Science & Medicine 70:8, pages 1123-1130.
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Sandra Gray, Helen A. Akol & Mary Sundal. (2010) Longitudinal weight gain of immunized infants and toddlers in Moroto District, Uganda (Karamoja subregion). American Journal of Human Biology 22:1, pages 111-123.
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Sandra Gray, Helen A. Akol & Mary Sundal. (2008) Mixed‐longitudinal growth of Karimojong girls and boys in Moroto District, Uganda. American Journal of Human Biology 21:1, pages 65-76.
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Sandra Gray, Hellen A. Akol & Mary Sundal. (2008) Mixed‐longitudinal growth of breastfeeding children in Moroto District, Uganda (Karamoja subregion). A loss of biological resiliency?. American Journal of Human Biology 20:5, pages 499-509.
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Sandra J. Gray, Brandi Wiebusch & Helen A. Akol. (2004) Cross-sectional growth of pastoralist Karimojong and Turkana children. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 125:2, pages 193-202.
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Sandra Gray, Mary Sundal, Brandi Wiebusch, Michael A. Little, Paul W. Leslie & Ivy L. Pike. (2003) Cattle Raiding, Cultural Survival, and Adaptability of East African Pastoralists. Current Anthropology 44:S5, pages S3-S30.
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Sherrill R. MosconeMary Jane Moore. (2016) Breastfeeding during Pregnancy. Journal of Human Lactation 9:2, pages 83-88.
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Michael A. Little. (1989) Human biology of African pastoralists. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 32:S10, pages 215-247.
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Paul Milligan & Michael Pugh Thomas. (1986) Relationships between development and disease. Environmentalist 6:2, pages 129-140.
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RobinJ. Biellik & PeggyL. Henderson. (1981) MORTALITY, NUTRITIONAL STATUS, AND DIET DURING THE FAMINE IN KARAMOJA, UGANDA, 1980. The Lancet 318:8259, pages 1330-1333.
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Helmut Kloos, Giuseppe Desole & Aklilu Lemma. (1981) Intestinal parasitism in seminomadic pastoralists and subsistence farmers in and around irrigation schemes in the Awash Valley, Ethiopia, with special emphasis on ecological and cultural associations. Social Science & Medicine. Part B: Medical Anthropology 15:4, pages 457-469.
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Charles C. Hughes & John M. Hunter. (1970) Disease and “development” in Africa. Social Science & Medicine (1967) 3:4, pages 443-493.
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I. H. E. Rutishauser & R. G. Whitehead. (2007) Field evaluation of two biochemical tests which may reflect nutritional status in three areas of Uganda. British Journal of Nutrition 23:1, pages 1-13.
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M.E. Alpert, M.S.R. Hutt & C.S. Davidson. (1968) HEPATOMA IN UGANDA. The Lancet 291:7555, pages 1265-1267.
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