Abstract

Background and objectivesUndergraduate courses that include evolutionary medicine (EM) are increasingly available, but quantified data about such courses are lacking. In this article, we describe relevant course offerings by institution and department type, in conjunction with information on the backgrounds and experiences of associated instructors.MethodologyWe searched course catalogs from 196 American universities to find courses that include EM, and sent a survey to 101 EM instructors to ask about their backgrounds and teaching experiences.ResultsResearch-focused universities (R1) were much more likely to offer at least one course that covers evolutionary applications to health and disease than universities that granted only bachelor’s or master’s degrees. A survey course on EM was offered in 56% of 116 R1 universities, but only 2% of the 80 non-R1 universities we searched. Most EM instructors have backgrounds in anthropology or biology; each instructor’s area of expertise provides clues as to how continued growth of EM may occur differently by discipline.Conclusions and implicationsUndergraduates are most likely to learn about EM in research-intensive universities from an anthropological or biological perspective. Responses from anthropology and biology instructors, including whom they share course materials with, highlight that courses may differ depending on the discipline in which they are taught.LAY SUMMARYRecognition of evolution’s relevance to understanding health and disease is growing, but documentation of coverage in undergraduate education is lacking. This study explores where evolutionary medicine (EM) content is taught across 196 undergraduate institutions and how 53 instructors describe their experiences teaching EM.

Highlights

  • Evolutionary medicine (EM) applies an evolutionary lens to medically relevant topics to deepen our understanding of disease and treatment strategies

  • At least one evolutionary medicine (EM) course of any type was available at 92.5% of R1 institutions, 40% of Baccalaureate Colleges with Arts & Sciences Focus (BCASFs) and 22.5% of master’s granting universities (Table 1, Supplementary Table S1)

  • EM is primarily taught in biology and anthropology departments

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Summary

Introduction

Evolutionary medicine (EM) applies an evolutionary lens to medically relevant topics to deepen our understanding of disease and treatment strategies. We describe relevant course offerings by institution and department type, in conjunction with information on the backgrounds and experiences of associated instructors. Methodology: We searched course catalogs from 196 American universities to find courses that include EM, and sent a survey to 101 EM instructors to ask about their backgrounds and teaching experiences. Results: Research-focused universities (R1) were much more likely to offer at least one course that covers evolutionary applications to health and disease than universities that granted only bachelor’s or master’s degrees. Responses from anthropology and biology instructors, including whom they share course materials with, highlight that courses may differ depending on the discipline in which they are taught. This study explores where evolutionary medicine (EM) content is taught across 196 undergraduate institutions and how 53 instructors describe their experiences teaching EM

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