In the centuries following the Enlightenment, scientific and technological developments gave ‘modern people’ an unprecedented ability to understand, predict and control the natural world. This has brought health and social benefits unimaginable to our ancestors and sets us apart from all previous generations. Yet there is a wide-ranging body of evidence that suggests that modernity is now in decline, largely because its methods and mindset are increasingly recognized as unsustainable. Problems are manifest in the emergence of new public health epidemics such as obesity and addictive behaviours, the loss of well-being and increase in anxiety and depression in affluent society, and the persistence of ever-widening health and social inequaliti...
Global health is fashionable. It provokes a great deal of media, student, and faculty interest, has ...
Our world has changed dramatically since the 1950s. The pace of change has been so rapid that the la...
The study examined the emerging paradigm shift in health in Western society. The concept of a paradi...
In the centuries following the Enlightenment, scientific and technological developments gave ‘modern...
This article attempts to bridge the gap between the values and skills that currently inform public h...
We make a case in this article for re-orienting public health, based on evidence that societies acro...
What is the future for public health in the twenty-first century? Can we glean an idea about the fut...
The two central tenets proposed by Hanlon and his co-authors Carlisle, Hannah, Lyon and Reilly that ...
This paper will argue that the UK has seen several phases of public health improvement since the Ind...
One hundred years ago, the application of the “Flexner” report introduced modern science to the foun...
Climate change, poverty, environmental degradation, and deepening inequality – the future before us ...
<b>Background:</b> A range of evidence suggests that the dominant culture associated wit...
A long life in good health is considered one of the most important goals in human life. New healthca...
The paper considers the long-term trajectory of public health and whether a ‘Golden Era’ in Public H...
Radical changes in the biosphere and human interaction with the environment are increasingly impacti...
Global health is fashionable. It provokes a great deal of media, student, and faculty interest, has ...
Our world has changed dramatically since the 1950s. The pace of change has been so rapid that the la...
The study examined the emerging paradigm shift in health in Western society. The concept of a paradi...
In the centuries following the Enlightenment, scientific and technological developments gave ‘modern...
This article attempts to bridge the gap between the values and skills that currently inform public h...
We make a case in this article for re-orienting public health, based on evidence that societies acro...
What is the future for public health in the twenty-first century? Can we glean an idea about the fut...
The two central tenets proposed by Hanlon and his co-authors Carlisle, Hannah, Lyon and Reilly that ...
This paper will argue that the UK has seen several phases of public health improvement since the Ind...
One hundred years ago, the application of the “Flexner” report introduced modern science to the foun...
Climate change, poverty, environmental degradation, and deepening inequality – the future before us ...
<b>Background:</b> A range of evidence suggests that the dominant culture associated wit...
A long life in good health is considered one of the most important goals in human life. New healthca...
The paper considers the long-term trajectory of public health and whether a ‘Golden Era’ in Public H...
Radical changes in the biosphere and human interaction with the environment are increasingly impacti...
Global health is fashionable. It provokes a great deal of media, student, and faculty interest, has ...
Our world has changed dramatically since the 1950s. The pace of change has been so rapid that the la...
The study examined the emerging paradigm shift in health in Western society. The concept of a paradi...