Couverture de Nested Ecologies

Nested Ecologies

A Multilayered Ethnography of Functional Medicine

Aperçu

Bénéficiez gratuitement de Standard pendant 30 jours

5,99 €/mois après la période d’essai. Annulation possible à tout moment
Essayez pour 0,00 €
Plus d'options d'achat
Acheter pour 21,99 €

Acheter pour 21,99 €

À propos de ce contenu audio

How functional medicine leverages systems biology and epigenetic science to treat the microbiome and reverse chronic disease.

Each body is a system within a system—an ecology within the larger context of social, political, economic, cultural, and environmental factors. This is one of the lessons of epigenetics, whereby structural inequalities are literally encoded in our genes. But our ecological embeddedness extends beyond DNA, for each body also teems with trillions of bacteria, yeast, and fungi, all of them imprints of our individual milieus. Nested Ecologies asks what it would mean to take seriously our microbial being, given that our internal ecologies are shaped by inequalities embedded in our physical and social environments.

Further, Rosalynn Vega argues that health practices focused on patients’ unique biology inadvertently reiterate systemic inequities. In particular, functional medicine—which attempts to heal chronic disease by leveraging epigenetic science and treating individual microbiomes—reduces illness to problems of “lifestyle,” principally diet, while neglecting the inability of poor people to access nutrition. Functional medicine thus undermines its own critique of the economics of health care. Vega challenges us to rethink not only the determinants of well-being but also what it is to be human.

The book is published by University of Texas Presss. The audiobook is published by University Press Audiobooks.

©2023 University of Texas Press (P)2025 Redwood Audiobooks
Anthropologie Médecine alternative et complémentaire Naturopathie et médecine holistique

Commentaires

"An important read for functional medicine practitioners and advocates... (H-Net Reviews)

"A much-needed critique of health care systems...offers critical, timely, and vulnerable discussions of health and health care... " (CHOICE)

"This work is at the cutting edge of a critical, and integrative, medical anthropology...A fantastic and necessary book." (Agustín Fuentes, Princeton University)

Aucun commentaire pour le moment