Overview
Dr. Aunchalee Palmquist is an Associate Professor of the Practice at the Duke Global Health Institute with a secondary appointment in Cultural Anthropology. She holds a PhD in Medical Anthropology from the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa and is an International Board Certified Lactation Consultant (IBCLC).
Dr. Palmquist is a global health equity scholar, feminist ethnographer, and internationally recognized breastfeeding and human lactation researcher. Her scholarship bridges biocultural medical anthropology and global health. Inspired by feminist anthropology, Indigenous methodologies, bioethics, and human rights frameworks, she uses research to uncover root causes of global health challenges and to imagine new directions for policy, practice, and advocacy. Dr. Palmquist has over 20 years of experience conducting ethnographic, mixed-methods, and community-based participatory research and collaborates on interdisciplinary research with scholars from around the world.
Prior to joining DGHI, Dr. Palmquist was an Assistant Professor at the UNC Chapel Hill Gillings School of Global Public Health and the Carolina Global Breastfeeding Institute. She was the 2021 recipient of a Gillings Faculty Award for Excellence in Health Equity Research and a two-time recipient of a Teaching Innovation Award in the Gillings School, Department of Maternal and Child Health (2020, 2023).
Dr. Palmquist has served as a CGBI representative on the WHO/UNICEF Global Breastfeeding Collective (2017-2023), the Emergency Nutrition Network IFE Core Group (2017-2023), and the United States Breastfeeding Committee as Co-Steward of the COVID-19 Infant and Young Child Feeding Constellation (2020-2023). Dr. Palmquist has previously served as an International Lactation Consultants Association liaison to the United Nations (2017).
Current Appointments & Affiliations
Recent Publications
Mapping fertility trajectories: An endarkened narrative inquiry of Black women's fertility experiences and pathways through infertility treatment
Conference Social Science and Medicine · July 1, 2025 While existing literature has documented barriers and facilitators to Black women's access to infertility treatment, scholars have a limited understanding of the experiences of Black women who have initiated medically assisted reproduction (MAR), including ... Full text CiteMapping fertility trajectories: An endarkened narrative inquiry of Black women's fertility experiences and pathways through infertility treatment
Journal Article Social Science & Medicine · July 2025 Full text CiteChallenges and support factors in managing type 2 diabetes among pregnant women in Thailand: A convergent mixed-methods study.
Journal Article Belitung nursing journal · January 2025 BackgroundSociocultural and behavioral factors have a multifaceted impact on maternal health. In Thailand, cultural influences significantly shape behaviors of diabetes self-management in women. However, the experience of self-managing diabetes in ... Full text CiteRecent Grants
Breastfeeding intervention to prevent obesity among Latine children
ResearchPrincipal Investigator · Awarded by University of North Carolina - Greensboro · 2024 - 2027View All Grants