| Literature DB >> 35854919 |
Abstract
Increasingly, health reflects an integrated outcome of a growing globalized system. Economic, political, cultural, environmental, and other global processes profoundly influence how we understand and approach health challenges. As these occur in a webbed, dynamic, and interdependent fashion, health can be viewed as a complex issue. Drawing from this understanding, in this viewpoint, I assert applying complexity theory to produce a definition of the field of global health. Complexity theory tenets such as non-linearity, transdisciplinarity, open-system analysis, and global-local phenomenology can provide a theoretical basis for a substantive understanding of global health phenomena and a richer instrumental approach to global health challenges. Harmonization between complexity theory and global health may provide the foundation to close the health equity gap put forth by the global health agenda. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Complex systems; globalization; interconnection; systems thinking; transdisciplinarity
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35854919 PMCID: PMC9248995 DOI: 10.5334/aogh.3758
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Glob Health ISSN: 2214-9996 Impact factor: 3.640
Figure 1Health as an outcome of a global/local eco-social system.
Figure 2Global health as the study of the global and local processes that determine health and the interactions between these processes.