2000
DOI: 10.1002/1520-6300(200007/08)12:4<478::aid-ajhb7>3.0.co;2-0
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Modernisation and children's blood pressure: On and off the tourist trail in Nepal

Abstract: Blood pressure and anthropometric measurements were taken for 231 children between 11 and 14 years in the Annapurna area of Central Nepal, a popular tourist destination. Children from villages on the tourist trail, whose lifestyles were generally more modernised, were compared with children from nearby villages off the tourist trail. Indications of greater modernisation on the trail included the findings that fathers of children living on the trail were less likely to work as farmers than fathers of those off … Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Results from several different studies in western Samoa suggest that communities in greater contact with Western goods and values experience higher levels of stress (James et al, 1987;McDade et al, 2000;McGarvey, 1999). A study from Nepal found that proximity to the tourism trail significantly increased children's weight and blood pressure, with more dramatic effects for girls than boys (Pollard et al, 2000). Flinn and England (1997) found associations between unstable family environments and increased stress responses among children in a rural Caribbean village.…”
Section: Psychosocial Stressmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Results from several different studies in western Samoa suggest that communities in greater contact with Western goods and values experience higher levels of stress (James et al, 1987;McDade et al, 2000;McGarvey, 1999). A study from Nepal found that proximity to the tourism trail significantly increased children's weight and blood pressure, with more dramatic effects for girls than boys (Pollard et al, 2000). Flinn and England (1997) found associations between unstable family environments and increased stress responses among children in a rural Caribbean village.…”
Section: Psychosocial Stressmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Seven studies used quantitative methods including surveys and tests. Four studies used tests to measure the impact of tourism on the health of children (e.g., Jensen, Marlin, Dyck, & Laubach, 2009;Leatherman et al, 2010;Pollard et al, 2000) and to measure the internal disposition of children (e.g., Klaver, 2015). Three studies conducted surveys to identify child labourers' education status (e.g., Al-Frehat & Alhelalat, 2015), to examine the feasibility of malaria eradication programs (e.g., Dancause et al, 2011), and to evaluate children's perception of tourists and immigrants (e.g., Molero et al, 2003).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Child-Resident, which is the second biggest theme, several studies investigated how host-children perceived or made sense of tourism spaces (e.g., Buzinde & Manuel-Navarrete, 2013;Ohashi et al, 2012), tourists and also themselves as residents living in the host communities (e.g., Gamradt, 1995;Molero, Navas, Alema´ n, & Cuadrado, 2003). Other studies investigated the impact of economic development and modernisation driven by the tourism industry on host-children's health (e.g., Dancause et al, 2011;Himmelgreen, Romero-Daza, Amador, & Pace, 2012;Leatherman, Goodman, & Stillman, 2010;Pollard et al, 2000) and on street children's access to education (e.g., Gössling, Schumacher, Morelle, Berger, & Heck, 2004). Several studies explored the impacts of tourism on host-children with a focus on material and health impacts; no study considered the quality of life or well-being of the host-children despite the transformative potential of tourism if channelled into the right directions (Higgins-Desbiolles, 2006).…”
Section: [Table 3 Near Here]mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This means they can illuminate biological pathways through which psychosocial stress influences human health (Crosswell and Lockwood 2020;Dressler 2004;Worthman and Costello 2009). For example, assessment of social contexts has clarified that greater exposure to market-based lifestyles and the internalization of new but unachievable social and economic expectations of success explain higher blood pressure levels and risk of chronic disease (Bindon et al 1997;Dressler 1999;Dressler et al 2005;Pollard et al 2000;Silva et al 2016;Steffen et al 2006;Valeggia and Snodgrass 2015;Waldron et al 1982). Psychosocial stressors such as racism have also been shown to explain blood pressure variability in the African diaspora better than skin tone or genetic ancestry, pointing to the primacy of sociocultural processes (Gravlee et al 2005(Gravlee et al , 2009Non et al 2012).…”
Section: Measuring Psychosocial Stress In Context: Opportunities Limi...mentioning
confidence: 99%