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7.
J Midwifery Womens Health ; 64(2): 154-169, 2019 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30806488

ABSTRACT

Tattooing is a type of body modification that is both ancient and modern. Tattooing is rapidly increasing in popularity and prevalence, especially among younger people. Therefore, health care providers require knowledge about this form of artistic expression, including potential health implications and psychosocial significance. Tattooing is richly laden with cultural and personal meaning, but despite the increasingly mainstream status of this art form, individuals with tattoos may experience stigma, stereotyping, and discrimination in their personal and professional lives. The legal and regulatory aspects of tattoos have lagged behind the rapid growth of this art form, causing confusion and variation in practice. Particularly concerning is the multitude of largely unregulated tattoo inks marketed for human use but untested on humans. Common and uncommon side effects and complications of this procedure include hypersensitivity, infection, and regret. More women than men are now tattooed, and tattooing is associated with important implications for women's health care, including pregnancy, childbirth, and breastfeeding. Because of the frequency of regret, many individuals wish to be rid of previously acquired body art. Therefore, health care providers also need to be conversant with tattoo removal: motivations, techniques, risks, and factors influencing success. Familiarity with the many dimensions of body art will facilitate safe, compassionate health care provision and will enhance the therapeutic relationship enjoyed by clinicians and the individuals they serve.


Subject(s)
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Tattooing/history , Tattooing/legislation & jurisprudence , Tattooing/psychology , Coloring Agents/adverse effects , Creativity , Dermatitis/etiology , Female , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Hypersensitivity/etiology , Infections/etiology , Male , Motivation , Needles/adverse effects , Social Perception , Social Stigma
8.
Int J Paleopathol ; 25: 99-109, 2019 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29907541

ABSTRACT

This essay describes the potential for using ethnographic evidence and mummified tattooed skin to reflect on past therapeutic tattoo practice in the Arctic. It also considers the ways in which circumpolar concepts of disease emerged in relation to the agency of nonhuman entities. I argue that specific forms of curative tattooing offer interpretive models for the paleopathological and bioarchaeological study of care through an ontological framework of analysis.


Subject(s)
Anthropology, Cultural/history , Archaeology , Medicine, Traditional/history , Mummies/history , Tattooing/history , Arctic Regions , Biological Ontologies , Dermatologic Surgical Procedures , Female , Health Services/history , History, Medieval , Humans , Indigenous Peoples , Male , Skin
9.
Int J Paleopathol ; 25: 110-117, 2019 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30098946

ABSTRACT

The Tyrolean Iceman is the world's oldest glacier mummy. He was found in September 1991 in the Italian part of the Ötztal Alps. Since his discovery a variety of morphological, radiological and molecular analyses have been performed that revealed detailed insights into his state of health. Despite the various pathological conditions found in the Iceman, little is known about possible forms of care and treatment during the Copper Age in Northern Italy. A possible approach to this topic is the presence of tattoos on the mummified body. In previous work, it was already believed that the tattoos were administered as a kind of treatment for his lower back pain and degenerative joint disease of his knees, hip and wrist. In other studies, the tattoos of the Iceman have been related to an early form of acupuncture. We carefully re-evaluated the various health issues of the Iceman, including joint diseases, gastrointestinal problems and arterial calcifications and compared them to the location and number of tattoos. Together with the finding of medically effective fungi and plants, such as the birch polypore or fern in his equipment and intestines, we suggest that care and treatment was already common during the Iceman's time.


Subject(s)
Gastrointestinal Diseases/history , Health Services/history , Joint Diseases/history , Mummies/history , Tattooing/history , Vascular Calcification/history , Acupuncture Therapy , Carbon Isotopes/analysis , Diet , Fungi , Gastrointestinal Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Gastrointestinal Diseases/therapy , Health Status , History, Ancient , Humans , Ice Cover , Italy , Joint Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Joint Diseases/therapy , Male , Mummies/diagnostic imaging , Nitrogen Isotopes/analysis , Plants, Medicinal , Vascular Calcification/diagnostic imaging , Vascular Calcification/therapy
10.
Cutis ; 101(5): E14-E16, 2018 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29894541

ABSTRACT

Tattoos have a long history in the United States and the world. As dermatologists, we often treat patients who regret their tattoos and are seeking to have them removed. Laser technology allows for more effective tattoo removal. There are many unique risks to tattoo removal compared to general laser procedures, including paradoxical tattoo ink darkening and even allergic reactions to tattoo ink. Given the persistence of tattoos throughout history, this treatment challenge will likely persist for many years to come.


Subject(s)
Tattooing/history , Dermatology , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, Ancient , Humans , Internship and Residency , Laser Therapy , United States
13.
Curr Probl Dermatol ; 48: 1-5, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25833618

ABSTRACT

For millennia, peoples around the world have tattooed human skin to communicate various ontological, psychosocial, and sociocultural concepts encompassing beauty, cultural identity, status and position, medicine, and supernatural protection. As a system of knowledge transmission, tattooing has been and continues to be a visual language of the skin whereby culture is inscribed, experienced, and preserved in a myriad of specific ways. If we are to fully comprehend the meanings that tattoos have carried across human history and into the present, then it would be useful to explore some of the ways tattoos, as instruments that transmit culture, have been deployed cross-culturally through time.


Subject(s)
Culture , Tattooing/history , Beauty , Female , History, 20th Century , History, Ancient , Humans , Male , Social Class , Social Identification , Spirituality
14.
Curr Probl Dermatol ; 48: 21-30, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25833620

ABSTRACT

Starting out as a professional tattooist back in 1977 in Copenhagen, Denmark, Frank Rosenkilde has personally experienced the remarkable development of tattoo machines, needles and utilities: all the way from home-made equipment to industrial products of substantially improved quality. Machines can be constructed like the traditional dual-coil and single-coil machines or can be e-coil, rotary and hybrid machines, with the more convenient and precise rotary machines being the recent trend. This development has resulted in disposable needles and utilities. Newer machines are more easily kept clean and protected with foil to prevent crosscontaminations and infections. The machines and the tattooists' knowledge and awareness about prevention of infection have developed hand-in-hand. For decades, Frank Rosenkilde has been collecting tattoo machines. Part of his collection is presented here, supplemented by his personal notes.


Subject(s)
Tattooing/history , Equipment Design/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Tattooing/instrumentation
18.
Forensic Sci Med Pathol ; 9(4): 534-42, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23846907

ABSTRACT

Tattooing refers to marking of the skin by puncturing and introducing pigmented material. Although it derives from a Polynesian word, tautau, decorative tattooing has been found in most societies over many centuries. The purpose of tattooing has varied from simple decoration, to a marker of social rank, criminal and noncriminal group membership, or a particular rite of passage in tribal communities. Tattooing may be used in medicine to mark areas for radiotherapy, and may occur inadvertently associated with certain occupations such as coal mining. Forensically, tattoos may be very useful in assisting with body identification if facial features or fingers have been damaged or removed. Aspects of a decedent's history may also be deduced from certain tattoos such as military tattoos in service personnel, rudimentary line tattoos with antisocial and anti-police messages in ex-prisoners, and syringes, marihuana leaves or mushrooms in illicit drug users. Tattoos have become more common in recent years in younger individuals in the West and so should be expected to be found with increasing incidence at the time of forensic autopsy examinations. Increasing population movements also mean that less common tattoos may be encountered during forensic evaluations.


Subject(s)
Forensic Sciences/methods , Skin/pathology , Tattooing , Autopsy , Cause of Death , Cultural Characteristics , History, Ancient , Humans , Tattooing/adverse effects , Tattooing/history
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