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Shifting Paradigms in Public Health

by Yadavendu, Vijay Kumar.
Authors: SpringerLink (Online service) Physical details: XVII, 203 p. online resource. ISBN: 813221644X Subject(s): Medicine. | medicine %Philosophy. | Public health. | Medicine & Public Health. | Public Health. | Biomedicine general. | Philosophy of Medicine. | Popular Science in Medicine and Health.
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E-Book E-Book AUM Main Library 613 (Browse Shelf) Not for loan

Foreword -- Chapter 1. Introduction: Public Health in Dilemma of Facticity -- PART I: PHILOSOPHICAL HISTORIOGRAPHY OF PUBLIC HEALTH -- Chapter 2. Origins and Orientations of Medicine and Health: A Socio-historical Overview -- Chapter 3. Philosophical Historiography of Epidemiology -- Chapter 4. Epidemiology, Sociology and Psychology of Health and Disease -- PART II: METHODOLOGICAL INDIVIDUALISM IN SOCIAL SCIENCES -- Chapter 5. Ideas and Ideologies of Methodological Individualism in Sociology of Knowledge and Neoliberal Economics -- Chapter 6. Individuation of Psychology -- PART III: STRUCTURE POWER AND THEORY OF HEALTH INEQUALITIES -- Chapter 7. Polemics and Politics of Health Inequalities: A Critique -- Chapter 8. Metaphor of HIV/AIDS Policy: Images and Contexts -- Chapter 9. Epilogue: The Past and Future of Public Health.

This transdisciplinary volume outlines the development of public health paradigms across the ages in a global context and argues that public health has seemingly lost its raison d’être, that is, a population perspective. The older, philosophical approach in public health involved a holistic, population-based understanding that emphasized historicity and interrelatedness to study health and disease in their larger socio-economic and political moorings. A newer tradition, which developed in the late 19th century following the acceptance of the germ theory in medicine, created positivist transitions in epidemiology. In the form of risk factors, a reductionist model of health and disease became pervasive in clinical and molecular epidemiology. The author shows how positivism and the concept of individualism removed from public health thinking the consideration of historical, social and economic influences that shape disease occurrence and the interventions chosen for a population. He states that the neglect of the multifactorial approach in contemporary public health thought has led to growing health inequalities in both the developed and the developing world. He further suggests that the concept of ‘social capital’ in public health, which is being hailed as a resurgence of holism, is in reality a sophisticated and extended version of individualism. The author presents the negative public policy consequences and implications of adopting methodological individualism through a discussion on AIDS policies. The book strongly argues for a holistic understanding and the incorporation of a rights perspective in public health to bring elements of social justice and fairness in policy formulations.

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