Asthma is on the rise, especially among poor urban minorities. There's still no cure, but the disease can be controlled, and this book offers the vital information officials need to develop the most effective public health response to this troubling disease.
Asthma, Health, and Society
A Public Health Perspective
Edited by Andrew Harver, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte
Harry Kotses, Ohio University, Athens
Asthma, Health, and Society is a comprehensive, current resource on this complex disease-its scope, human costs, and management-from a combined social ecology/public health perspective. This important and unique book proposes a concerted, multifaceted response and sets out the foundation for shaping this response, comprising individual and large-scale assessment, education, advocacy, and multiple forms of intervention. In clear, authoritative detail enhanced by figures, graphs, and references, contributors explain where universal standards need to be set, alliances need to be built (such as among agencies and institutions in a community), and what is currently known about:
Pathophysiology, epidemiology, and social impact of asthma.
Genetic and environmental factors; protective factors and risk markers.
Effects in women, minorities, children, teens, and elders.
Medical management, self-management, and home monitoring.
Evidence-based interventions at the family, school, and community levels.
Screening guidelines, compliance issues, and more.
In the absence of a cure or clear-cut causes, Asthma, Health, and Society offers the most robust compilation of practical knowledge on its subject to benefit the range of public health and asthma professionals, researchers, teachers, and students
Asthma, Health, and Society
A Public Health Perspective
Edited by Andrew Harver, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte
Harry Kotses, Ohio University, Athens
Asthma, Health, and Society is a comprehensive, current resource on this complex disease-its scope, human costs, and management-from a combined social ecology/public health perspective. This important and unique book proposes a concerted, multifaceted response and sets out the foundation for shaping this response, comprising individual and large-scale assessment, education, advocacy, and multiple forms of intervention. In clear, authoritative detail enhanced by figures, graphs, and references, contributors explain where universal standards need to be set, alliances need to be built (such as among agencies and institutions in a community), and what is currently known about:
Pathophysiology, epidemiology, and social impact of asthma.
Genetic and environmental factors; protective factors and risk markers.
Effects in women, minorities, children, teens, and elders.
Medical management, self-management, and home monitoring.
Evidence-based interventions at the family, school, and community levels.
Screening guidelines, compliance issues, and more.
In the absence of a cure or clear-cut causes, Asthma, Health, and Society offers the most robust compilation of practical knowledge on its subject to benefit the range of public health and asthma professionals, researchers, teachers, and students
"Asthma, Health and Society is a unique and comprehensive view of asthma in society today...the concept of the "ecology" of asthma offers a significant leap forward. It reflects a more comprehensive understanding of the interaction between the patient and his or her family, community, and culture...(The volume) will be of significant interest to physicians who seek a better understanding of the larger picture and to other clinicians and policy makers."
Katherine Gundling, MD, JAMA
Katherine Gundling, MD, JAMA