Most of public health is based on the working hypothesis that disease is caused by exposure to noxious factors in the external environment. While this approach has produced great successes in primary prevention, a general theory of the origins of human disease cannot be found in the textbooks of public health or epidemiology. This paper suggests that, in all its manifestations, disease is a reaction of the human organism to, and/or a failure to cope with, one or more unbalancing changes in its internal environment. These are caused by one or more unfavourable exchanges with the external environment and/or failures in the structural and functional design of the organism. In the final analysis, human disease is attributable to the dependence ...
The interaction of man with viral agents was possibly a key factor shaping human evolution, culture ...
AbstractInfectious diseases are the confrontation of two worlds, the microbial world and the world o...
Why are some individuals and groups within a society more prone to illness than others? How do we kn...
The main aims of this review were to understand the roles of evolutionary process in human disease. ...
Many of the major human infectious diseases, including some now confined to humans and absent from a...
Versión redactada de un texto presentado en el 19th International Congress of Historical SciencesIt ...
historical and scientific foundations of 2 companion pa-pers published in 1996, entitled ‘‘Choosing ...
Natural selection is the driving force behind evolution and describes how traits become fixed in a p...
The study of the evolution of man sel-dom takes into consideration the role of disease in this devel...
The interaction of man with viral agents was possibly a key factor shaping human evolution, culture ...
Abstract: Human health and well-being is affected appreciably by the environment around...
Human diseases are not distributed at random geographically or temporally. The present chapter revie...
Abstract: Fundamental cause theory suggests that because persons of higher socioeconomic status have...
From the ancient ages, the human has been plagued by numerous diseases. While ancient people attribu...
Combining recent medical discoveries with historical and geographical scholarship, The Cambridge Wor...
The interaction of man with viral agents was possibly a key factor shaping human evolution, culture ...
AbstractInfectious diseases are the confrontation of two worlds, the microbial world and the world o...
Why are some individuals and groups within a society more prone to illness than others? How do we kn...
The main aims of this review were to understand the roles of evolutionary process in human disease. ...
Many of the major human infectious diseases, including some now confined to humans and absent from a...
Versión redactada de un texto presentado en el 19th International Congress of Historical SciencesIt ...
historical and scientific foundations of 2 companion pa-pers published in 1996, entitled ‘‘Choosing ...
Natural selection is the driving force behind evolution and describes how traits become fixed in a p...
The study of the evolution of man sel-dom takes into consideration the role of disease in this devel...
The interaction of man with viral agents was possibly a key factor shaping human evolution, culture ...
Abstract: Human health and well-being is affected appreciably by the environment around...
Human diseases are not distributed at random geographically or temporally. The present chapter revie...
Abstract: Fundamental cause theory suggests that because persons of higher socioeconomic status have...
From the ancient ages, the human has been plagued by numerous diseases. While ancient people attribu...
Combining recent medical discoveries with historical and geographical scholarship, The Cambridge Wor...
The interaction of man with viral agents was possibly a key factor shaping human evolution, culture ...
AbstractInfectious diseases are the confrontation of two worlds, the microbial world and the world o...
Why are some individuals and groups within a society more prone to illness than others? How do we kn...