Modern environments and human health : revisiting the second epidemiological transition / edited by Molly K. Zuckerman.

"Written in an engaging and jargon-free style by a team of international and interdisciplinary experts, Modern Environments and Human Health demonstrates by example how methods, theoretical approaches, and data from a wide range of disciplines can be used to resolve longstanding questions about...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Zuckerman, Molly K. (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Hoboken, New Jersey : Wiley-Blackwell, [2014]
Subjects:
Online Access:Click for online access
Table of Contents:
  • 1 Introduction: Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Second Epidemiologic Transition / Molly K. Zuckerman
  • Part 1 Causes of the Second Epidemiologic Transition
  • 2 Infectious Disease in Philadelphia, 1690-1807: An Ecological Perspective / Gilda M. Anroman
  • 3 Modeling the Second Epidemiologic Transition in London: Patterns of Mortality and Frailty during Industrialization / Sharon N. DeWitte
  • 4 The Wider Background of the Second Transition in Europe: Information from Skeletal Material / Nikola Koepke
  • 5 The Epidemiological Transition in Practice: Consumption, Phthisis, and TB in the 19th Century / Jeffrey K. Beemer
  • Part 2 Epidemic Infectious Disease and the Second Epidemiologic Transition
  • 6 Agent-Based Modeling and the Second Epidemiologic Transition / Carolyn Orbann, Jessica Dimka, Erin Miller and Lisa Sattenspiel
  • 7 Does Exposure to Influenza Very Early in Life Affect Mortality Risk during a Subsequent Outbreak? The 1890 and 1918 Pandemics in Canada / Stacey Hallman and Alain Gagnon
  • Part 3 Regional and Temporal Variation in the Second Epidemiologic Transition
  • 8 The Second Epidemiologic Transition in Western Poland / Alicja Budnik
  • 9 The Timing of the Second Epidemiologic Transition in Small US Towns and Cities: Evidence from Local Cemeteries / Lisa Sattenspiel and Rebecca S. Lander
  • 10 Industrialization and the Changing Mortality Environment in an English Community during the Industrial Revolution / Peter M. Kitson
  • Part 4 Marginalized and Underrepresented Communities in the Second Epidemiologic Transition
  • 11 Short Women and Their Stagnating Growth: A Study of Biological Welfare and Inequality of Women in Postcolonial India / Aravinda Meera Guntupalli
  • 12 Tracking the Second Epidemiologic Transition Using Bioarchaeological Data on Infant Morbidity and Mortality / Megan A. Perry
  • 13 The Biological Effects of Urbanization and In-Migration on 19th-Century-Born African Americans and Euro-Americans of Low Socioeconomic Status: An Anthropological and Historical Approach / Carlina de la Cova
  • Part 5 The Environment and the Second Epidemiologic Transition
  • 14 Reassessing the Good and Bad of Modern Environments: Developing a More Comprehensive Approach to Health Trend Assessment / Lawrence M. Schell
  • 15 Childhood Lead Exposure in the British Isles during the Industrial Revolution / Andrew Millard, Janet Montgomery, Mark Trickett, Julia Beaumont, Jane Evans, and Simon Chenery
  • 16 The Hygiene Hypothesis and the Second Epidemiologic Transition / Molly K. Zuckerman and George J. Armelagos
  • 17 Comparative Parasitological Perspectives on Epidemiologic Transitions: The Americas and Europe / Karl J. Reinhard and Elisa Pucu de Arajo
  • Part 6 Epilogue
  • 18 The Second Epidemiologic Transition, Adaptation, and the Evolutionary Paradigm / George J. Armelagos
  • 19 The Second Epidemiologic Transition from an Epidemiologist's Perspective / Nancy L. Fleischer and Robert E. McKeown
  • 20 Methodological Perspectives on the Second Epidemiologic Transition: Current and Future Research / Richard H. Steckel
  • 21 The Current State of Knowledge on the Industrial Epidemiologic Transition: Where Do We Go from Here? / Timothy B. Gage.