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Theorizing epidemiology, the stories bodies tell, and embodied truths: a status update on contending 21 st c CE epidemiological theories of disease distribution.

Nancy Krieger
Published in: International journal of social determinants of health and health services (2024)
This critical review considers the status of 21st-century epidemiological theories of disease distribution, updating to 2024 prior analyses published up through 2014, and discusses the implications of these theories for research, practice, and pedagogy. Three key trends stand out: ( a ) the continued dominance of individualistic biomedical and lifestyle theories; ( b ) growth and elaboration of social epidemiological alternatives; and ( c ) the ongoing inattention to epidemiologic theories of disease distribution in the training of epidemiologists and public health professionals and in current efforts to improve the rigor of epidemiological research and causal inference. In a context of growing global political polarization, climate crisis, broader environmental and ecological crises, and stubbornly persistent health inequities within and between nations, producing actionable knowledge relevant to improving the people's health and advancing health justice will require much greater engagement with social epidemiologic theories of disease distribution in research, pedagogy, and practice. At issue is critically engaging with the embodied truths manifested in the stories bodies tell in population patterns of health, disease, and well-being.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • public health
  • primary care
  • cardiovascular disease
  • randomized controlled trial
  • climate change
  • systematic review
  • metabolic syndrome
  • social media
  • weight loss
  • risk assessment
  • mental illness