Complex Systems and Population Health
ISBN: 9780190880774
Platform/Publisher: Oxford Academic / Oxford University Press
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Unlimited; Download: Unlimited
Subjects: Public Health Epidemiology;

Currently, population health science is an integral part of global academic curricula. For over a century, the principles of the reductionist paradigm have guided population health curricula, training, research, and action. Researchers continue to draw upon these principles when theorizing, conceptualizing, designing studies, analyzing, and devising interventions to tackle complex population health problems. However, unresolved impasses in addressing pressing population health challenges have catalyzed calls for the integration of complex-systems-science-grounded approaches into population health science. Mounting evidence denotes that a complex systems paradigm can bring about dramatic, multipronged changes for education and training, and lead to innovative research, interventions, and policies. Despite the large and untapped promise of complex systems, the haphazard knowledge base from which academics, researchers, students, policymakers, and practitioners can draw has slowed their integration into the population health sciences.

This volume fulfils this growing need by providing the knowledge base necessary to introduce a holistic complex systems paradigm in population health science. As such, it is the first comprehensive book in population health science that meaningfully integrates complex systems theory, methodology, modeling, computational simulation, and real-world applications, while incorporating current population health theoretical, methodological and analytical perspectives. It is intended as a programmatic primer across a broad spectrum of population health stakeholders: from university professors and graduate students, to researchers, policymakers, and practitioners.



Yorghos Apostolopoulos, Associate Professor of Population Health and Founding Director of the Complexity & Computational Population Health Group, Texas A&M University; Kristen Hassmiller Lich, Associate Professor, Department of Health Policy and Management, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Michael Kenneth Lemke, Assistant Professor, Department of Social Sciences, University of Houston-Downtown in Houston, Texas.

Yorghos Apostolopoulos is Associate Professor of Population Health and Founding Director of the Complexity & Computational Population Health Group at Texas A&M University.

Kristen Hassmiller Lich is an Associate Professor in the Department of Health Policy and Management at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Michael Kenneth Lemke is Assistant Professor in the Department of Social Sciences at the University of Houston-Downtown in Houston, Texas.
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