Population Health and Environment
Previous Population-Environment Interactions
Environment, Population, and Health Dynamics
Kristine Chua
Kristine Joy Chua is a postdoctoral scholar in the Department of Anthropology at UCSB and earned her Ph.D. in Biological Anthropology from UCLA. Her research combines evolutionary and biocultural anthropology perspectives to understand how chronic stress “gets under the skin” during pregnancy. She utilizes methods from anthropology, biology, and public health to explore the social and biological factors that create and sustain peri- and postnatal inequities and the role that cultural practices play in shaping health norms. She works closely with pregnant Filipina mothers in the Philippines and pregnant mothers in Southern California. Current research questions include: (1) how does the maternal immune system respond to fetal cells circulating throughout pregnancy (co-director: Amy Boddy); (2) how do pregnant Filipina mothers respond to stress from their socio-political environment; (3) how are definitions of stress and coping mechanisms impacted by cultural attitudes; and (4) what conditions could preterm birth be an adaptive response for mothers. In addition to her academic work, she maintains her commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion through undergraduate mentorship, partnerships with K-12 educators, and collaborations with community stakeholders.
The need for evolutionary theory in cancer research.
European Journal of Epidemiology. 1-6.
Bridging clinic and wildlife care with AI-powered pan-species computational pathology.
Nature Communications. 14.1: 2408.
Is chimerism associated with cancer across the tree of life?
PloS one 18.6(e0287901.
Impact of health insurance on adult mortality in rural areas: Evidence of Seguro Popular in Mexico using panel data.
World Development Perspectives, 30, 100501, https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1gpxP8jbZmZuLm
Keeping Kin Close? Geographies of Family Networks by Race and Income, 1981-2017.
Journal of Marriage and Family 85(4):962-986. https://doi.org/10.1111/jomf.12911
Implementation and Validation of Location-Based Survey to Assess Geographic Network and Hotspots of Sex and Drug Use in Los Angeles County.
JMIR Formative Research 7:e45188 (PMCID: PMC10337421)
The Great Demographic Illusion: Majority, Minority, and the Expanding American Mainstream.
Contemporary Sociology.
The Importance of Arthur Getis to Spatial Demography.
Journal of Geographical Systems.
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