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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Talk objectives
- Human birth & evolutionary medicine
- Evolution = survival and reproductive success
- What makes us human?
- Human evolutionary history overview: timeline
- The primate order
- Key players in human evolutionary history
- Postcranial evidence
- How to make inferences about human evolution?
- Human evolutionary history: impact on birth
- Small birth canal/big baby tradeoff
- Problems with understanding of the trade-off
- Is difficult birth unique to humans?
- Effect of bipedalism on birth
- Brain/head size vs. birth canals
- Bipedalism and pelvis shape
- Bipedal pelvis good for bipedalism, not for birth
- Baboon vs. human pelvic inlets
- Human pelvic inlet & outlet are perpendicular
- Challenge: 3 dimensions that need to line up
- Another head dimension that needs to line up
- Dimension line up chimpanzees vs. humans
- Human lateral view at outlet
- Problem of rigid shoulders
- Perpendicular head & shoulders of infant
- Summary: ways in which human birth is unusual
- Japanese macaque delivery
- Unassisted non-human primate delivery
- Why others are present at human births
- Enter pelvis facing side
- Descent and rotation to sacrum
- Exit facing sacrum
- Hands grasp to complete delivery
- When does this birth pattern emerge?
- Lucy's pelvis
- How did birth occur in 'Lucy'?
- Typical Australopithecus pelvis
- Evolutionary legacy of birthing women
- Evolutionary medicine
- Distinction between defects & defenses
- Problems anxiety in labor can lead to
- Doula support
- Advantages of having emotional support (1)
- Advantages of having emotional support (2)
- Fear of childbirth
- Cesarean section rates
- Risks to infant
- Risks to mother and future offspring
- Epigenetic effects?
- Advantages to fear of childbirth
- Problems, solutions & perspectives
- Evolutionary medicine and incompatibilities
- New problems when trying to solve old ones
- Objectives of this presentation: summary
- Thank you
- References
Topics Covered
- Human evolutionary history
- Human evolution and childbirth
- Birth in other primates
- How anatomical changes for bipedalism impact birth
- Birth in early human ancestors
- The helpless human newborn
- The evolutionary legacy of birth
- Why women benefit from assistance at birth
- Value of emotional support during labor and delivery
Links
Series:
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Talk Citation
Trevathan, W. (2020, August 16). Evolutionary obstetrics [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/CCCF9034.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Wenda Trevathan has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
A selection of talks on Gynaecology & Obstetrics
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello, my name is Wenda Trevathan,
and I'm Professor of Anthropology
at New Mexico State University
in the United States.
In this presentation,
which I have entitled
"Evolutionary Obstetrics",
I want to provide an evolutionary
medicine perspective
on human birth.
In order to do this,
I want to place birth
in the context
of human evolutionary history.
0:22
I have three objectives
in this presentation.
First, I want to describe
the evolutionary history
of human birth,
highlighting its unique aspects.
I also intend to illuminate
the deep evolutionary roots
of the human need
for assistance at birth.
And to understand something
about how humans give birth
in the presence
of other individuals
rather than in solitude,
as many mammals do.
And I want to demonstrate the value
of an evolutionary approach
in medicine,
especially for obstetrics.
0:51
There are a number of ways
in which human birth
illustrates the principles
of evolutionary medicine
that have been reviewed
in some of the other lectures
in this series.
It's an excellent example
of the lack of perfection
in design.
In fact, human birth
is often used as good evidence
against the idea
of an intelligent designer
because of all
the complications associated
with labor and delivery.
The way humans give birth
results from a series of tradeoffs
that have left the body vulnerable
to a number of challenges.
Discomfort during
labor and delivery
may have both proximate
and ultimate explanations.
And birth illustrates
the Trivers hypothesis
about parent-infant conflict.
The terms highlighted are
some of the classic terms
used in evolutionary medicine.
1:32
It's important to remember
that evolution is about
survival and reproductive success.
In order for genes to be subject
to natural selection,
individuals need to survive
to the point
where they can reproduce
and then pass them along
to succeeding generation.
The moment of birth is probably
the single most risky hour
in the normal life course.
Therefore,
it's a point of
intense natural selection.
And the survival
and reproductive success
of two individuals is at stake,
the mother and the infant.
There are, in association
with this,
numerous tradeoffs
with regard to birth
in the course of human evolution.