The optics of noncommunicable diseases: from lifestyle to environmental toxicity.
Clare HerrickPublished in: Sociology of health & illness (2020)
Until recently, the noncommunicable disease (NCD) category was composed of four chronic diseases (cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and chronic respiratory disease) and four shared, 'modifiable' behavioural risk factors (smoking, diet, physical activity and alcohol). In late 2018, the NCD category was expanded to include mental health as an additional disease outcome and air pollution as an explicit environmental risk factor. The newly-expanded NCD category connects behavioural and environmental readings of risk and shifts attention from individual acts of consumption to unequal and inescapable conditions of environmental exposure. It thus renders the increasing 'toxicity' of everyday life amid ubiquitous environmental contamination a new conceptual and empirical concern for NCD research. It also, as this paper explores, signals a new 'optics' of a much-maligned disease category. This is particularly significant as chronic disease research has long been siloed between public and environmental health, with each discipline operationalising the notion of the 'environment' as a source of disease causation in contrasting ways. Given this, this paper is positioned as a significant contribution to both research on NCDs and environmental risk, bringing these interdisciplinary domains into a new critical conversation around the concept of toxicity.
Keyphrases
- human health
- cardiovascular disease
- mental health
- physical activity
- risk factors
- life cycle
- type diabetes
- air pollution
- risk assessment
- healthcare
- oxidative stress
- metabolic syndrome
- public health
- emergency department
- body mass index
- adipose tissue
- depressive symptoms
- climate change
- chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- alcohol consumption
- cystic fibrosis
- skeletal muscle
- lung function
- cardiovascular risk factors
- mental illness
- squamous cell