Health among the Amish explained
Health among the Amish is characterized by higher incidences of particular genetic disorders, especially among the Old Order Amish. These disorders include dwarfism, Angelman syndrome, and various metabolic disorders, such as Tay-Sachs disease, as well as an unusual distribution of blood types.
Overview
Amish represent a collection of different demes or genetically closed communities. Since almost all Amish descend from about 500 18th-century founders, genetic disorders that come out due to inbreeding exist in more isolated districts (an example of the founder effect). These disorders include dwarfism (Ellis–van Creveld syndrome),[1] Angelman syndrome,[2] and various metabolic disorders,[3] [4] as well as an unusual distribution of blood types. Some of these disorders are quite rare, or unique, and are serious enough to increase the mortality rate among Amish children. The majority of Amish accept these as "Gottes Wille" (God's will); they reject use of preventive genetic tests prior to marriage and genetic testing of unborn children to discover genetic disorders. However, Amish are willing to participate in studies of genetic diseases. Their extensive family histories are useful to researchers investigating diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and macular degeneration.
While the Amish are at an increased risk for some genetic disorders, researchers at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC – James) have found their tendency for clean living can lead to better health. Overall cancer rates in the Amish are 60 percent of the age-adjusted rate for Ohio and 56 percent of the national rate. Tobacco-related cancers in Amish adults are 37 percent and non-tobacco-related cancers are 72 percent of the rate for Ohio adults. The Amish are protected against many types of cancer both through their lifestyle—there is very little tobacco or alcohol use and limited sexual partners—and through genes that may reduce their susceptibility to cancer. Dr. Judith Westman, director of human genetics at OSUCCC – James, conducted the study. The findings were reported in a recent issue of the journal Cancer Causes & Control. Even skin cancer rates are lower for Amish, despite the fact many Amish make their living working outdoors where they are exposed to sunlight and UV rays. They are typically covered and dressed to work in the sun by wearing wide-brimmed hats and long sleeves which protect their skin.[5]
The Amish are conscious of the advantages of exogamy. A common bloodline in one community will often be absent in another, and genetic disorders can be avoided by choosing spouses from unrelated communities. For example, the founding families of the Lancaster County Amish are unrelated to the founders of the Perth County, Ontario Amish community. Because of a smaller gene pool, some groups have increased incidences of certain inheritable conditions.[6]
The Old Order Amish do not typically carry private commercial health insurance.[7] [8] About two-thirds of the Amish in Pennsylvania's Lancaster County participate in Church Aid, an informal self-insurance plan for helping members with catastrophic medical expenses.[7] A handful of American hospitals, starting in the mid-1990s, created special outreach programs to assist the Amish. The first of these programs was instituted at the Susquehanna Health System in central Pennsylvania by James Huebert. This program has earned national media attention in the United States, and has spread to several surrounding hospitals.[9] [10] Treating genetic problems is the mission of Clinic for Special Children in Strasburg, Pennsylvania, which has developed effective treatments for such problems as maple syrup urine disease, a previously fatal disease. The clinic is embraced by most Amish, ending the need for parents to leave the community to receive proper care for their children, an action that might result in shunning.
DDC Clinic for Special Needs Children, located in Middlefield, Ohio, has been treating special-needs children with inherited or metabolic disorders since May 2002.[11] The DDC Clinic provides treatment, research, and educational services to Amish and non-Amish children and their families.
The prevalence of asthma in the Amish of Indiana was low at 5.2% as compared to 21.3% in Hutterite schoolchildren of South Dakota; likewise the prevalence of allergic sensitization was 7.2% versus 33.3%. The lifestyles of the two groups are similar except for farming practices, where Hutterites use industrialized farming whereas Amish do not. In a study from 2016, important differences in the children's innate immune cells and in the allergy inducing nature of the dust in their homes were found, leading to the conclusion that the Amish environment had protected against asthma by shaping the innate immune response.[12]
Most Amish clearly seem to use some form of birth control, a fact that generally is not discussed among the Amish, but indicated by the fact that the number of children systematically increases in correlation with the conservatism of a congregation, the more conservative, the more children. The large number of children is due to the fact that many children are appreciated by the community and not because there is no birth control.[13] Some communities openly allow access to birth control to women whose health would be compromised by childbirth.[14] The Amish are against abortion and also find "artificial insemination, genetics, eugenics, and stem cell research" to be "inconsistent with Amish values and beliefs".[15]
People's Helpers is an Amish-organized network of mental health caregivers who help families dealing with mental illness and recommend professional counselors. Suicide rates for the Amish of Lancaster County were 5.5 per 100,000 in 1980, about half that of the general population.
References
Bibliography
- Book: Hostetler, John A. . John A. Hostetler . Amish Society . 1993 . . 4 . 978-0801844423.
- Book: Kraybill, Donald B. . Donald Kraybill . The Riddle of Amish Culture . 2001 . .
Further reading
Bipolar affective disorder
- Kelsoe . J. R. . Ginns . E. I. . Egeland . J. A. . Gerhard . D. S. . Goldstein . A. M. . Bale . S. J. . Pauls . D. L. . Long . R. T. . Kidd . K. K. . Conte . G. . Housman . D. E. . Paul . S. M. . Re-evaluation of the linkage relationship between chromosome 11p loci and the gene for bipolar affective disorder in the Old Order Amish . . 342 . 6247 . 238–243 . 1989 . 10.1038/342238a0 . 2682265 . 1989Natur.342..238K . 4331268 .
- Ginns . E. I. . Ott . J. . Egeland . J. A. . Allen . C. R. . Fann . C. S. J. . Pauls . D. L. . Weissenbachoff . J. . Carulli . J. P. . Falls . K. M. . Keith . T. P. . Paul . S. M. . A genome-wide search for chromosomal loci linked to bipolar affective disorder in the Old Order Amish . . 12 . 4 . 431–435 . 1996 . 10.1038/ng0496-431 . 8630500 . 13156440 .
- Ginns . E. I. . St Jean . P. . Philibert . R. A. . Galdzicka . M. . Damschroder-Williams . P. . Thiel . B. . Long . R. T. . Ingraham . L. J. . Dalwaldi . H. . Murray . M. A. . Ehlert . M. . Paul . S. . Remortel . B. G. . Patel . A. P. . Anderson . M. C. . Shaio . C. . Lau . E. . Dymarskaia . I. . Martin . B. M. . Stubblefield . B. . Falls . K. M. . Carulli . J. P. . Keith . T. P. . Fann . C. S. . Lacy . L. G. . Allen . C. R. . Hostetter . A. M. . Elston . R. C. . Schork . N. J. . Egeland . J. A. . A genome-wide search for chromosomal loci linked to mental health wellness in relatives at high risk for bipolar affective disorder among the Old Order Amish . . 95 . 26 . 15531–15536 . 1998 . 9861003 . 28077. 8 . 1998PNAS...9515531G . 10.1073/pnas.95.26.15531 . free .
- 10.1192/bjp.178.41.s134 . Blackwood . D. H. . Visscher . P. M. . Muir . W. J. . Genetic studies of bipolar affective disorder in large families . . 178 . Suppl 41 . S134–S136 . 2001 . 11388952. free .
Cystic fibrosis
- 10.1007/BF00286641 . Wood Klinger . K. . Cystic fibrosis in the Ohio Amish: Gene frequency and founder effect . . 65 . 2 . 94–98 . 1983 . 6654341. 189889167 .
- 10.7326/0003-4819-110-8-599 . Knowles . M. R. . Barnett . T. B. . McConkie-Rosell . A. . Sawyer . C. . Kahler . S. G. . Mild cystic fibrosis in a consanguineous family . . 110 . 8 . 599–605 . 1989 . 2930093.
- Henderson . J. F. . Anbar . R. D. . 10.1186/1471-2431-9-4 . Care for Amish and Mennonite children with cystic fibrosis: A case series . . 9 . 4 . 2009 . 19146658 . 2637265 . free .
- 10.1016/0048-9697(90)90124-D . McCrae . I. S. . Hickman . A. J. . Air pollution from traffic in topographically complex locations . . 93 . 331–338 . 1990 . 1694304. 1990ScTEn..93..331M .
Diabetes
- 10.2337/diacare.23.5.595 . Hsueh . W. C. . Mitchell . B. D. . Aburomia . R. . Pollin . T. . Sakul . H. . Gelder Ehm . M. . Michelsen . B. K. . Wagner . M. J. . St Jean . P. L. . Knowler . W. C. . Burns . D. K. . Bell . C. J. . Shuldiner . A. R. . Diabetes in the Old Order Amish: Characterization and heritability analysis of the Amish Family Diabetes Study . . 23 . 5 . 595–601 . 2000 . 10834415. free .
- 10.2337/diabetes.52.2.550 . Hsueh . W. C. . St Jean . P. L. . Mitchell . B. D. . Pollin . T. I. . Knowler . W. C. . Ehm . M. G. . Bell . C. J. . Sakul . H. . Wagner . M. J. . Burns . D. K. . Shuldiner . A. R. . Genome-wide and fine-mapping linkage studies of type 2 diabetes and glucose traits in the Old Order Amish: Evidence for a new diabetes locus on chromosome 14q11 and confirmation of a locus on chromosome 1q21-q24 . . 52 . 2 . 550–557 . 2003 . 12540634. free .
- Rampersaud . E. . Damcott . C. M. . Fu . M. . Shen . H. . McArdle . P. . Shi . X. . Shelton . J. . Yin . J. . Chang . Y. -P. C. . 10.2337/db07-0457 . Ott . S. H. . Zhang . L. . Zhao . Y. . Mitchell . B. D. . O'Connell . J. . Shuldiner . A. R. . Identification of Novel Candidate Genes for Type 2 Diabetes from a Genome-Wide Association Scan in the Old Order Amish: Evidence for Replication from Diabetes-Related Quantitative Traits and from Independent Populations . . 56 . 12 . 3053–3062 . 2007 . 17846126 . free .
Happiness
- Biswas-Diener . R. . Vittersø . J. . Diener . E. . 10.1007/s10902-005-5683-8 . Most People are Pretty Happy, but There is Cultural Variation: The Inughuit, the Amish, and the Maasai . . 6 . 3 . 205–226 . 2005 . 143987250 .
Healthcare
- Adams . C. E. . Leverland . M. B. . 10.1097/00006205-198603000-00008 . The Effects of Religious Beliefs on the Health Care Practices of the Amish . The Nurse Practitioner . 11 . 3 . 58, 63, 67 . 1986 . 3446212.
Inbreeding
- Khoury . M. J. . Cohen . B. H. . Diamond . E. L. . Chase . G. A. . McKusick . V. A. . Inbreeding and prereproductive mortality in the Old Order Amish. I. Genealogic epidemiology of inbreeding . . 125 . 3 . 453–461 . 1987 . 3812451. 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a114551 .
- Khoury . M. J. . Cohen . B. H. . Newill . C. A. . Bias . W. . McKusick . V. A. . Inbreeding and prereproductive mortality in the Old Order Amish. II. Genealogic epidemiology of prereproductive mortality . . 125 . 3 . 462–472 . 1987 . 3812452. 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a114552 .
- Khoury . M. J. . Cohen . B. H. . Diamond . E. L. . Chase . G. A. . McKusick . V. A. . Inbreeding and prereproductive mortality in the Old Order Amish. III. Direct and indirect effects of inbreeding . . 125 . 3 . 473–483 . 1987 . 3812453. 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a114553 .
- Puffenberger . E. G. . Genetic heritage of the Old Order Mennonites of southeastern Pennsylvania . 10.1002/ajmg.c.20003 . . 121C . 1 . 18–31 . 2003 . 12888983 . 25317649 . free .
- 10.1353/hub.2001.0045 . Agarwala . R. . Schäffer . A. A. . Tomlin . J. F. . Towards a complete North American Anabaptist Genealogy II: Analysis of inbreeding . . 73 . 4 . 533–545 . 2001 . 11512680. 42236600 .
- Jackson . C. E. . Symon . W. E. . Pruden . E. L. . Kaehr . I. M. . Mann . J. D. . Consanguinity and blood group distribution in an Amish Isolate . . 20 . 6 . 522–527 . 1968 . 5714527 . 1706380.
- Dorsten . L. E. . Hotchkiss . L. . King . T. M. . 10.1080/00380237.1996.10570639 . Consanguineous Marriage and Early Childhood Mortality in an Amish Settlement . . 29 . 2 . 179–185 . 1996 .
Obesity
- 10.1210/JCEM.86.3.7358 . Hsueh . W. C. . Mitchell . B. D. . Schneider . J. L. . St Jean . P. L. . Pollin . T. I. . Ehm . M. G. . Wagner . M. J. . Burns . D. K. . Sakul . H. . Bell . C. J. . Shuldiner . A. R. . Genome-wide scan of obesity in the Old Order Amish . . 86 . 3 . 1199–1205 . 2001 . 11238509. free .
- Bassett . D. R. . Schneider . P. L. . Huntington . G. E. . 10.1249/01.MSS.0000106184.71258.32 . Physical Activity in an Old Order Amish Community . . 36 . 1 . 79–85 . 2004 . 14707772 . 17875860 . free .
- Bassett . D. R. . Tremblay . M. S. . Esliger . D. W. . Copeland . J. L. . Barnes . J. D. . Huntington . G. E. . 10.1249/mss.0b013e31802d3aa7 . Physical Activity and Body Mass Index of Children in an Old Order Amish Community . . 39 . 3 . 410–415 . 2007 . 17473766 . free .
Notes and References
- Ellis-van Creveld syndrome and the Amish . . 2000 . 24 . 3 . 10.1038/73389 . 10700162 . 203–204 . McKusick . Victor A. . 1418080.
- Mutation of HERC2 causes developmental delay with Angelman-like features . Harlalka . G.V. . . 2013 . November 3, 2014 . 50 . 2 . 10.1136/jmedgenet-2012-101367 . 65–73 . 23243086 . 206997462.
- 10.1002/ajmg.c.20002 . Pediatric medicine and the genetic disorders of the Amish and Mennonite people of Pennsylvania . https://archive.today/20130105052615/http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/104542765/abstract . dead . January 5, 2013 . Morton . D. Holmes . Morton . Caroline S. . Strauss . Kevin A. . Robinson . Donna L. . Puffenberger . Erik G. . Hendrickson . Christine . Kelley . Richard I. . 12888982 . . 5–17 . 1 . 121C . June 27, 2003 . 25532297 . Regional hospitals and midwives routinely send whole-blood filter paper neonatal screens for tandem mass spectrometry and other modern analytical methods to detect 14 of the metabolic disorders found in these populations… . July 2, 2008.
- Web site: Tay-Sachs Disease . United Brain Association . February 13, 2023.
- Web site: Amish Have Lower Rates of Cancer, Ohio State Study Shows . January 1, 2010 . . January 6, 2010 . Columbus, OH . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100616103822/http://www.internalmedicine.osu.edu/genetics/article.cfm?id=5307 . June 16, 2010.
- Web site: Genomics in Amish Country . Ruder . Katherine . July 23, 2004 . Genome News Network.
- News: Amish Reluctantly Accept Donations . Rubinkam . Michael . . October 5, 2006 . March 25, 2008.
- Web site: Amish Studies – Beliefs . . February 2, 2013.
- News: Doctors make house calls in barn . https://archive.today/20040619061900/http://www.dailyitem.com/archive/2004/0618/local/stories/04local.htm . dead . June 19, 2004 . The Daily Item . June 18, 2004 . Bevin . Milavsky . March 4, 2012.
- News: A culture vastly different from the rest of America . The Irish Medical Times . August 3, 2007 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081006103532/http://www.imt.ie/lifestyle/2007/08/a_culture_vastly_different_fro.html . October 6, 2008 .
- Web site: DDC Clinic for Special Needs Children . October 7, 2011 . November 25, 2011.
- Innate Immunity and Asthma Risk in Amish and Hutterite Farm Children . Michelle M. . Stein. . Cara L. . Hrusch . Justyna . Gozdz . etal . . 2016 . 375 . 5 . 411–421 . 10.1056/NEJMoa1508749 . 27518660 . 5137793.
- Book: Donald B. . Kraybill . Karen M. . Johnson-Weiner . Steven M. . Nolt . 2013 . The Amish . Baltimore . . 157–158.
- Showalter . Anita . 2000 . Birthing among the Amish . . 15 . 10.
- Book: Transcultural concepts in nursing care . Margaret M. . Andrews . Joyceen S. . Boyle . . . 2002 . 13 . 3 . 178–180 . 10.1177/10459602013003002 . January 19, 2008 . 12113145 . 978-0781736800 . 201377433 . Google Books.