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This book focuses on theories employed to explain patterns of disease in their societal and ecological context. The range of theories span from ancient Greece and China and different strands of traditional medicine to the 19th c rise of epidemiology as a scientific discipline on through the present, and contrasts the dominant theories - biomedical and lifestyle - to their social epidemiologic alternatives: sociopolitical, psychosocial, and ecosocial theory of disease distribution. A central argument is that explicit use of -- and debates over -- epidemiologic theories of disease distribution will improve the rigor of the science and its ability to advance health justice.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Preface: Second Edition
- Preface: 2013 Paperback Edition
- Preface: 2011 Hardback Edition
- 1. Does Epidemiologic Theory Exist? On Science, Data, and Explaining
- Disease Distribution
- 2. Health in the Balance: Early Theories About Patterns of Disease
- Occurrence
- 3. Epidemiology Emerges: Early Theories and Debating Determinants of
- Disease Distribution-Poison, Filth, Class, and Race (1600-1900)
- 4. Epidemiology Expands: Germs, Genes, and the (Social) Environment
- (1900-1950)
- 5. Contemporary Mainstream Epidemiologic Theory: Biomedical and
- Lifestyle
- 6. Social Epidemiologic Alternatives: Sociopolitical and Psychosocial
- Frameworks
- 7. Ecosocial Theory of Disease Distribution: Embodying Societal and
- Ecologic Context
- 8. Epidemiologic Theory Counts: Harm, Knowledge, Action, and the
- People's Health
- References
- Index
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Nancy Krieger is Professor of Social Epidemiology, American Cancer Society Clinical Research Professor, and Director of the Interdisciplinary Concentration on Women, Gender, and Health at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. An internationally recognized social epidemiologist (PhD, Epidemiology, UC Berkeley, 1989) and ISI highly cited scientist, her background includes biochemistry, philosophy of science, and history of public health, plus 35+ years of health justice activism. Dr. Krieger’s work on health inequities encompasses: (1) conceptual frameworks, including her ecosocial theory of disease distribution, focused on embodiment and equity; (2) etiologic research; and (3) monitoring and methodologic research.
Zusammenfassung
Why a thoroughly updated and revised second edition of this book about theories of disease distribution, in past and present societal and ecological context? Because the lived realities and ideas, data, and disinformation about the people's health are dynamic, not static. The first edition, published in 2011, addressed a major problem: although epidemiology is often referred to as the science of public health, unlike other sciences, its theoretical foundations are rarely articulated. While the idea of epidemiologic theory may seem dry and arcane, it is at its core about explaining the people's health.
Drawing on new scholarship and providing new examples, this new edition of Epidemiology and the People’s Health extends its analysis of theories employed to explain patterns of disease in their societal and ecological context and explicates how epidemiologic theory has long shaped epidemiologic practice, knowledge, and the politics of public health. The range of theories spans from ancient Greece and China and different strands of traditional medicine to the 19th-century rise of epidemiology as a scientific discipline on through the present and contrasts the currently dominant theories -- biomedical and lifestyle -- to their social epidemiologic alternatives: sociopolitical, psychosocial, and ecosocial theory of disease distribution. Central to the argument of this book is that explicit use of- and debates over -- epidemiologic theories of disease distribution will improve the odds of producing epidemiologic knowledge truly useful for preventing disease, improving the public's health, and advancing health justice.
Zusatztext
Krieger revisits and amplifies her astute, sensitive, state-of-the-art analysis of how epidemiology's past and present grapple with social (in)justice, incorporating such critical issues as the corporate determinants of health and the political ecology of climate change. A pioneering, ever- salient, and compelling must-read.