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Health Without Borders: Epidemics in the Era of Globalization 1st ed. 2017 [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 108 pages, height x width: 235x155 mm, weight: 454 g, XV, 108 p., 1 Paperback / softback
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Jun-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Springer International Publishing AG
  • ISBN-10: 3319524453
  • ISBN-13: 9783319524450
  • Mīkstie vāki
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 108 pages, height x width: 235x155 mm, weight: 454 g, XV, 108 p., 1 Paperback / softback
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Jun-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Springer International Publishing AG
  • ISBN-10: 3319524453
  • ISBN-13: 9783319524450
This book discusses globalization and its impact on human health. The population of the world grew from 1 billion in 1800 to 7 billion in 2012, and over the past 50 years the mean temperature has risen faster than ever before. Both factors continue to rise, as well as health inequalities. Our environment is changing rapidly, with tremendous consequences for our health. These changes produce complex and constantly varying interactions between the biosphere, economy, climate and human health, forcing us to approach future global health trends from a new perspective. Preventive actions to improve health, especially in low-income countries, are essential if our future is going to be a sustainable one. After a period of undeniable improvement in the health of the worlds population, this improvement is likely to slow down and we will experience at least locally crises of the same magnitude as have been observed in financial markets since 2009. There is instability in health systems, which will worsen if preventive and buffering mechanisms do not take on a central role. We cannot exclude the possibility that the allied forces of poverty, social inequalities, climate change, industrial food and lack of governance will lead to a deterioration in the health of large sectors of the population. In low-income countries, while many of the traditional causes of death (infectious diseases) are still highly prevalent, other threats typical of affluent societies (obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases) are increasing. Africa is not only affected by malaria, TB and HIV, but also by skyrocketing rates of cancer. The book argues that the current situation requires effective and coordinated multinational interventions guided by the principle of health as a common good. An entirely competition-driven economy cannot by its very nature address global challenges that require full international cooperation. A communal global leadership is called for.

Paolo Vineis is Chair of Environmental Epidemiology at Imperial College. His current research activities focus on examining biomarkers of disease risk as well as studying the effects of climate change on non-communicable diseases.

From morality to molecules, environment to equity, climate change to cancer, and politics to pathology, this is a wonderful tour of global health consistently presented in a clear, readable format. Really, an important contribution.

Professor  Sir  Michael  Marmot Director, Institute of Health Equity University College London Author of The Health Gap

This book is a salutary and soundly argued reminder that the common good is not simply what remains after individuals and groups have appropriated the majority of societal resources: it is in fact the foundation on which any society rests and without which it collapses.

Rodolfo Saracci, International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France

Recenzijas

In Health without Borders, Vineis (Imperial College, UK), a leading researcher in the fields of environmental and molecular epidemiology, attempts to show relationships between economics, globalization, and modern public health issues. this book appropriate for a wide range of readers, especially those with an interest in global health and disease prevention. Summing Up: Recommended. All readers. (K. R. Thompson, Choice, Vol. 55 (5), January, 2018)

It does a good job of presenting the meaning of global health and begins to tie together the underlying causes of these global health threats . The intended audience is public health professionals and students of public health, which is an appropriate audience. (Angela Jean Toepp, Doody's Book Reviews, October, 2017)

1 The Double Debt: Economic and Environmental
1(8)
The Economic Crisis
1(1)
The Environmental Debt
2(2)
The Baumol Disease and the Funding of the State
4(1)
Co-benefits of Climate Change Mitigation
5(2)
Final Remarks
7(2)
2 An Overview of What Global Health Is
9(12)
Economy and Health
10(1)
Converging Trends: The Quest for a Minimal State, Misconceptions on Science, Fragmented Research
11(2)
Political Crisis, Health Crisis
13(1)
Health in a Global World
14(1)
Three Exemplary Cases: Nauru, Greece and Bangladesh
15(6)
Obesity in Nauru: A Story of Early Globalisation
15(1)
Greece: The Health Effects of Economic Crisis
16(2)
The Case of Bangladesh
18(3)
3 Food
21(8)
The Two Faces of Nutritional Problems
21(2)
The Global Food Industry
23(6)
4 Climate Change
29(10)
The Fifth Report by the IPCC: The Effects on Health
29(2)
Climate Change and Communicable Diseases
31(2)
Causality and Climate Change
33(2)
Climate Change and Vulnerability
35(1)
Denialism
36(3)
5 The Environment
39(6)
Aflatoxin
39(1)
Arsenic in Water and Other Environmental Exposures in Poor Countries
40(1)
Urban Sprawl, the Built Environment and Health
41(2)
The Microbiological Environment
43(2)
6 The Economic Crisis
45(8)
The WHO, Smallpox and Polio
48(2)
Globalisation and Health: The Prospects
50(3)
7 Cancer: A Time Bomb in Poor Countries
53(14)
Cancer as a Global and Preventable Problem
55(1)
The Agents that Cause Cancer and the Importance of Prevention
56(1)
The Global Epidemic of Diseases Linked to Tobacco
57(1)
Occupational Carcinogens
58(1)
Diet and Tumours
59(1)
Infectious Carcinogenic Agents
60(1)
Environmental Carcinogens
60(1)
Other Risk Factors: Socio-economic Status
61(1)
"Why Me?" Nature and Culture: The Role of Genetic Predisposition
62(1)
Primary Prevention of Tumours
63(1)
The Threats of Globalisation for the Primary Prevention of Cancer
64(1)
Final Remarks
65(2)
8 The Epigenetic Landscape
67(8)
Diabetes, Birth Weight and Epigenetics
70(1)
Diet and Epigenetics
71(1)
Can Diet Stabilise the Genome?
72(1)
Globalisation and the Epigenetic Landscape
73(2)
9 The Political Choices
75(10)
The End of Solidarity?
76(2)
The Precautionary Principle
78(1)
Environmental Sustainability
79(1)
On the Conflict of Interests
80(5)
10 Public Health as a Common Good
85(10)
Madison Against Jefferson
86(1)
Mill and the "Harm Principle"
87(1)
Freedom of Choice, Freedom of Enterprise
88(2)
Climate Change and Public Ethics
90(1)
Conclusions
91(4)
To Know More 95(2)
Bibliography 97(8)
Index 105
Paolo Vineis is a leading researcher in the fields of environmental and molecular epidemiology. His current research activities focus on examining biomarkers of disease risk and complex exposures, as well as studying the effects of climate change on non-communicable diseases. He has written several books and authored more than 800 scientific publications. He is Chair of Environmental Epidemiology at Imperial College, London and Head of the Unit of Molecular and Genetic Epidemiology at the HuGeF Foundation  in Torino.