Breathtaking Asthma Care in a Time of Climate Change |
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Author:
| Kenner, Alison |
ISBN: | 978-1-5179-0287-2 |
Publication Date: | Nov 2018 |
Publisher: | University of Minnesota Press
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $24.95 |
Book Description:
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Breathtaking analyzes asthma care in the twenty-first century.
Symptoms resembling asthma have been documented for more than two thousand years, yet today's changing ecologies, health care systems, medical sciences, and built environments are reshaping the disease. Now identified as a global epidemic, asthma (and our efforts to control it) demands an analysis attentive to its complexity, its contextual nature, and the care practices that emerge from both....
More Description
Breathtaking analyzes asthma care in the twenty-first century.
Symptoms resembling asthma have been documented for more than two thousand years, yet today's changing ecologies, health care systems, medical sciences, and built environments are reshaping the disease. Now identified as a global epidemic, asthma (and our efforts to control it) demands an analysis attentive to its complexity, its contextual nature, and the care practices that emerge from both. Breathtaking presents diverse contemporary perspectives informed by interviews with individuals who are living with asthma today.
Alison Kenner advances three arguments about asthma care in the United States. The first builds on the assertion that care practices are context-specific and temporally anchored. The second relates to how asthma sufferers use (or don't use) prescription drugs, paying special attention to biomedicalization, as well as to the environmental dimensions of disordered breathing and the structural conditions that make pharmaceutical treatments possible. Finally, she shows how, in the United States, contemporary approaches to environmental health have largely emphasized individual over collective responsibility. In conclusion, she reviews how new modes of collective care practices may be generating public health reforms that can more effectively address the asthma epidemic during a period of climate change.
Clearly written and theoretically insightful, Breathtaking is a sweeping ethnographic account of asthma's heterogeneity, told through the lived experiences of disordered breathers with a focus on their support networks, from new smartphone applications tailored to asthmatics to mobile asthma clinics to alternative breathing practitioners.