Colonial Medicine & Its Legacies
Global Health Systems & Interventions
Health Data & Its Limits
Ecosocial Theory & Embodiment
Environmental Crisis & Planetary Health
100

This describes how colonial medicine shaped future public health through mistrust and trauma.

Colonial medicine often caused trauma, leading to long-term distrust of public health authorities.

100

This metric allows comparison of disease burden across populations and conditions.

DALYs (Disability Adjusted Life Year)

100

This reading argues that health data is often incomplete and shaped by political, social, and technical factors.

Birn, Pillay, and Holtz (2009) “What Do We Know, What Do We Need to Know, and Why it Matters—Data on Health”

100

This type of cause is required for a disease to occur, such as TB exposure.

Necessary cause

100

This condition discussed by Alex Nading affects agricultural workers and is linked to heat stress and labor conditions rather than traditional causes.

CKDnt (Chronic Kidney Disease of nontraditional causes)

200

This explains how colonial land distribution increased disease spread like malaria.

Non-immune populations were moved into high-disease areas, increasing transmission and mortality.

200

This concept describes how the Smallpox Eradication Program exercised power over populations.

Biopower through coercive vaccination, surveillance, and movement control.

200

This concept from Joel Best explains why we should ask how numbers are produced, not just accept them.

Social construction of statistics

200

These are examples of how environmental exposure affects the body over time.

Lead exposure in Peru, burn pits, CKDnt

200

This concept describes how war reshapes environments in ways that produce long-term health effects, such as birth defects or toxic exposure.

War ecologies

300

These are examples of structural violence under colonial rule.

British diversion of famine relief in India, cordon sanitaire policies, and displacement of Indigenous populations away from resources.

300

This distinction compares broad vs. targeted approaches to healthcare systems.

Primary Health Care (PHC) focuses on broad health needs, while Selective PHC targets measurable interventions.

300

This example shows how a small estimate about bird deaths became exaggerated into a widely cited statistic.

Best’s bird-window collision estimate growing into “1 billion birds.”

300

This theory, developed by Nancy Krieger, explains how social inequalities and environmental exposures become biologically expressed in the body.

Ecosocial theory

300

According to Knowles, why should disasters not be considered purely “natural” events?

Social, political, and infrastructural conditions shape their impacts.

400

This term describes how colonial authorities used sanitation to control populations.

Sanitation syndrome

400

This term describes the era in which humans became the dominant force shaping the environment.

Anthropocene

400

According to Claire L. Wendland, why should we be cautious when interpreting maternal mortality ratios in places like Malawi?

They are often based on estimates, incomplete data, and modeling rather than direct counts.

400

This argument critiques treating asthma only as an individual condition.

Alison Kenner argues asthma must be understood as both environmental and biological, not just individual.

400

According to Nading, why is the plantation considered a “hotspot” for global health concerns?

It concentrates environmental harm, labor exploitation, and scientific attention in one place.

500

This describes how colonial powers engaged with African healing knowledge.

Some rejected it, while others used it without credit or meaningful collaboration.

500

These three frameworks differ in how they define the scale and focus of health interventions.

Global health (transnational equity), international health (between nations), planetary health (environment–health connection)

500

According to Durand, why can large estimates of climate migrants be problematic for understanding migration?

They oversimplify complex causes of migration and can shape misleading or fear-based political narratives.

500

Why is the concept of embodiment important for understanding health inequalities?

It shows how social and environmental inequalities become biologically incorporated into the body over time.

500

This concept is difficult to address because harm occurs gradually and is hard to trace to a single cause.

Slow violence

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