书目名称 | Hardwired: How Our Instincts to Be Healthy are Making Us Sick |
编辑 | Robert S. Barrett,Louis Hugo Francescutti |
视频video | |
概述 | Well timed with emerging clinical evidence supporting the idea of the mind-body connection, such as research on the shared pathways of inflammation and depression.Shines a spotlight directly on critic |
图书封面 |  |
描述 | .For the first time in a thousand years, Americans are experiencing a reversal in lifespan. Despite living in one of the safest and most secure eras in human history, one in five adults suffers from anxiety as does one-third of adolescents. Nearly half of the US population is overweight or obese and one-third of Americans suffer from chronic pain – the highest level in the world. In the United States, fatalities due to prescription pain medications now surpass those of heroin and cocaine combined, and each year 10% of all students on American college campuses contemplate suicide. With the proliferation of social media and the algorithms for social sharing that prey upon our emotional brains, inaccurate or misleading health articles and videos now move faster through social media networks than do reputable ones. .This book is about modern health – or lack of it. The authors make two key arguments: that our deteriorating wellness is rapidly becoming a health emergency, and two,that much of these trends are rooted in the way our highly evolved hardwired brains and bodies deal with modern social change. The co-authors: a PhD from the world of social science and an MD from the world of |
出版日期 | Book 2021 |
关键词 | public health; wellness; nutrition; obesity; lifespan; modern health |
版次 | 1 |
doi | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51729-8 |
isbn_softcover | 978-3-030-51728-1 |
isbn_ebook | 978-3-030-51729-8 |
copyright | The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerl |