| Literature DB >> 24434596 |
Christopher Coutts1, Annet Forkink2, Jocelyn Weiner3.
Abstract
This paper explores the conceptualization of the natural environment in an evolving ecological public health paradigm. The natural environment has long been recognized as essential to supporting life, health, and wellbeing. Our understanding of the relationship between the natural environment and health has steadily evolved from one of an undynamic environment to a more sophisticated understanding of ecological interactions. This evolution is reflected in a number of ecological public health models which demonstrate the many external and overlapping determinants of human health. Six models are presented here to demonstrate this evolution, each model reflecting an increasingly ecological appreciation for the fundamental role of the natural environment in supporting human health. We conclude that after decades of public health's acceptance of the ecological paradigm, we are only now beginning to assemble knowledge of sophisticated ecological interdependencies and apply this knowledge to the conceptualization and study of the relationship between the natural environment and the determinants of human health.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24434596 PMCID: PMC3924488 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph110101005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1The determinants of health (reprinted from [18] with permission from Elsevier®).
Figure 2The Mandala of Health (reprinted from [21] with permission from Oxford University Press®).
Figure 3The Butterfly Model of Health (reprinted from [15] with permission from John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii).
Figure 4The Health Map [24,25].
Figure 5Public Health Ecology (reprinted from [26] with permission from Kristen Ruby).
Figure 6Transformation via Balanced Exchanges Model.
Summary of fields that connect health and the natural environment.
| Field | Description |
|---|---|
| Conservation Medicine [ | Connects ecosystem, animal, and human health, but is largely focused on infectious disease transmission exacerbated by human encroachment into animal habitat. |
| OneHealth [ | “One Health is the collaborative effort of multiple disciplines-working locally, nationally, and globally to attain optimal health for people, animals and our environment” (p. 13). |
| EcoHealth [ | Encompasses Conservation Medicine and OneHealth but also considers equity and development in a socio-ecological systems approach to health. |
| Human Ecology [ | The study of human-environment interactions. Health has been considered as an outcome of these interactions. |
| Health Ecology [ | Health ecology places health as the core concept in human ecology, the ultimate aim of which “...is the creation and maintenance of healthy people in healthy environments” (p. 17). |
| Ecotoxicology [ | The study of the ecological products and mechanisms that have the potential to affect ecosystem functionality and cause illness. |
| Public Health Ecology [ | Presents the natural environment as fundamental to health and denotes the reciprocal relationship between the natural and built environment. |