Scientific investigations have progressively refined our understanding of the influence of the environment on human health, and the many adverse impacts that human activities
exert on the environment, from the local to the planetary level. Nonetheless, throughout
the modern public health era, health has been pursued as though our lives and lifestyles
are disconnected from ecosystems and their component organisms. The inadequacy of the
societal and public health response to obesity, health inequities, and especially global
environmental and climate change now calls for an ecological approach which addresses
human activity in all its social, economic and cultural complexity. The new approach must
be integral to, and interactive, with the natural environment.
Scientific investigations have progressively refined our understanding of the influence of the environment on human health, and the many adverse impacts that human activities
exert on the environment, from the local to the planetary level. Nonetheless, throughout
the modern public health era, health has been pursued as though our lives and lifestyles
are disconnected from ecosystems and their component organisms. The inadequacy of the
societal and public health response to obesity, health inequities, and especially global
environmental and climate change now calls for an ecological approach which addresses
human activity in all its social, economic and cultural complexity. The new approach must
be integral to, and interactive, with the natural environment.
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..
