贫穷与偏见:为被送往范迪门大陆的囚犯的口腔健康描绘一幅画卷

Kim Shaw, Silvana Bettiol, Leonard Crocombe
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摘要

口腔健康状况不佳与社会和经济劣势之间的关联是一个全球关注的问题,它继续困扰着弱势人群。贫穷及其相关压力也是导致 19 世纪英国囚犯口腔健康状况不佳的重要因素。本文分析了 1803 年至 1853 年间被押送到范迪门群岛(现称塔斯马尼亚)刑罚殖民地的囚犯的实物描述中对牙齿的偶然描述。对这些描述进行编码后发现,与男性罪犯相比,女性罪犯的牙齿缺失记录存在明显差异。为了解释这些发现并更好地了解这批囚犯的口腔健康状况,当前的研究借鉴了现代医学知识、相关生物考古学研究和考古发现文献以及当时的历史。营养不良、吸烟、不卫生的生活条件和对疾病的易感性增加是我们今天所知道的影响口腔疾病和牙齿脱落的共同主题。从审查的数据中得出的一个不太出人意料的结论是,性别偏见涉及对女性外貌的密切关注。在我们的分析中还发现了历史上公认的针对爱尔兰后裔的种族偏见的可能证据。
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Poverty and Prejudice: Assembling a Picture of the Oral Health of Convicts Sent to Van Diemen’s Land
The correlation between poor oral health and social and economic disadvantage is a global concern that continues to afflict vulnerable populations. Poverty and its related stresses were also significant factors in the poor oral health experienced by British convicts in the nineteenth century. This article presents an analysis of incidental descriptions of teeth, observed in physical accounts of convicts transported to the penal colonies of Van Diemen’s Land, now known as Tasmania, between the years 1803 and 1853. Coding of these descriptions found a significant disparity in the recorded tooth loss of female convicts when compared to their male counterparts. To interpret these findings and build a better understanding of the oral health status of this cohort, the current study draws on modern medical knowledge, relevant bioarchaeological studies and documented archaeological findings, as well as history of the time. Nutritional deficiencies, smoking, unsanitary living conditions and increased susceptibility to disease are common themes, which we know today, impact on oral disease and tooth loss. A less-expected narrative to emerge from the data reviewed, suggests a gender bias involving the close scrutiny of female appearance. Possible evidence of an historically acknowledged racial bias against those of Irish descent is also suggested in our analysis.
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