Philosophy of Population Health(History and Philosophy of Biology) H 224 p. 18
Valles, Sean A 著
目次
Acknowledgements Chapter 1: Blueprint of a philosophy of—and for—population health science A brief overview Introduction What is population health science? Why write a book on philosophy of population health science? What will this book accomplish? What are the book’s philosophical methods and commitments? What this book is not, and what it will not do Onward Section 1 What should health mean in population health science? Chapter 2 A brief history of the social concept of health and its role in population health science Introduction The biomedical model and the Biostatistical Theory of health Population health as (metaphysically) social health Health is (empirically) social Conclusion: Moving toward a thoroughly social health concept of health Case study: The Standing Rock Sioux Water Protectors Chapter 3 Health as a life course trajectory of complete well-being in social context Introduction: The many debates over health’s meaning Life Course Theory Life course lesson 1: Health is best understood as a lifelong phenomenon, not in time slices Life course lesson 2: Population health and individual health are best understood as co-developing dynamically The World Health Organization’s definition of health, not what it seems The WHO definition of health is not an operationalized tool for health assessment; it is a toolbox that guides the gathering of tools Making room for health pluralisms: metaphysical, empirical, ethical and methodological Conclusion: An updated health concept for an expansive population health mission Case Study: Addressing health disparities between Aboriginal Australians and settler Australians Section 2 Which causes and effects matter most in population health? Chapter 4 Expanding the boundaries of population health Introduction: health as life course of complete well-being in social context calls for a broad health promotion mandate Continuing from Chapter 3: ‘Health issues’ ≠ ‘healthcare issues’ "Boundary problem" problems Political theory and population health An unnecessary philosophical assumption: If X becomes a public health problem then it must be primarily or exclusively a public health problem An incorrect empirical prediction: Broad conceptions of public health predictably lead to harms to the public health professions or to the populations they serve The epistemic risks of erring on the side of wide vs. narrow boundaries for public health Conclusion: Expanding philosophy of population health to catch up with the science and practice Case Study: Global climate change Chapter 5 Prioritizing the right population health causes and effects Introduction: Addressing population health problems at the roots "Fundamental-cause theory": the wrong name for the right approach "Fundamental causes": Paramount importance because of a unique type of stability What is and isn’t wrong with risk factors Turning attention from "causes of cases" to "causes of incidence" Philosophy of salutogenesis vs. philosophy of pathogenesis Conclusion Case study: Brazil’s AIDS response Section 3 How can population health science better promote health equity? Chapter 6 Managing the inevitable trade-offs in population health science practice Introduction The problem of heterogeneity: Lumping vs. splitting in population health The high risk approach vs. the population approach Decentering the healthcare system to promote population health vs. expanding outward from the healthcare system Evidence-based medicine vs. public health pragmatism Conclusion Case study: the heterogeneous health of migrants Chapter 7 Ethics and Evidence in the Population Health Equity Debates Introduction: Population health science and health equity Health equity is built into population health science The (real and imagined) consequences of an ambiguous understanding of "health equity" Equitable health promotion and health governance Hypothetical problems’ outsized influence in population health equity deliberations Conclusion Case study: Investigating racism and racial health disparities Conclusion Chapter 8 Humility as the way forward for population health science, and philosophy thereof Introduction: A spirit of humility and collaboration Embracing epistemic humility Sectoral humility: Non-hierarchical intersectorality Disciplinary Humility: Non-hierarchical interdisciplinarity Population health science education for health professionals Population health science education for all Philosophy of population health science, from a position of service
カート
カートに商品は入っていません。