Final answer:
Forensic anthropology is a specialization within biological anthropology focused on analyzing human remains related to crime scenes and legal cases, not on the intersection of biological and cultural anthropology in health studies. That area is covered by medical anthropology.
Step-by-step explanation:
The question "Is forensic anthropology the specialization that unites biological and cultural anthropologists in the study of disease, illness, health problems, health care systems, and theories about illness in different cultures?" is false. Forensic anthropology is a subfield of biological anthropology that applies scientific methods primarily to legal cases, often at crime scenes, to analyze human remains in order to identify victims and determine causes of death. Medical anthropology is actually the field that involves the study of disease, illness, health problems, health care systems, and illness theories within cultural contexts. It examines how cultural, social, and biological factors influence health and illness experiences across different societies.