Article

Productivity loss associated with functional disability in a contemporary small-scale subsistence population

Jonathan Stieglitz, Paul L. Hooper, Benjamin C. Trumble, Hillard Kaplan, and Michael Gurven

Abstract

In comparative cross-species perspective, humans experience unique physical impairments with potentially large consequences. Quantifying the burden of impairment in subsistence populations is critical for understanding selection pressures underlying strategies that minimize risk of production deficits. We examine among forager-horticulturalists whether compromised bone strength (indicated by fracture and lower bone mineral density, BMD) is associated with subsistence task cessation. We also estimate the magnitude of productivity losses associated with compromised bone strength. Fracture is associated with cessation of hunting, tree chopping, and walking long distances, but not tool manufacture. Age-specific productivity losses from hunting cessation associated with fracture and lower BMD are substantial: ~397 lost kcals/day, with expected future losses of up to 1.9 million kcals (22% of expected production). Productivity loss is thus substantial for high strength and endurance tasks. Determining the extent to which impairment obstructs productivity in contemporary subsistence populations improves our ability to infer past consequences of impairment

Reference

Jonathan Stieglitz, Paul L. Hooper, Benjamin C. Trumble, Hillard Kaplan, and Michael Gurven, Productivity loss associated with functional disability in a contemporary small-scale subsistence population, eLife, vol. 9, n. e62883, December 2020.

Published in

eLife, vol. 9, n. e62883, December 2020