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Caring for biosocial complexity. Articulations of the environment in research on the Developmental Origins of Health and Disease

Michael Penkler

2022Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The research field of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD) provides a framework for understanding how a wide range of environmental factors, such as deprivation, nutrition and stress, shape individual and population health over the course of a lifetime. DOHaD researchers face the challenge of how to conceptualize and measure ontologically diverse environments and their interactions with the developing organism over extended periods of time. Based on ethnographic research, I show how DOHaD researchers are often eager to capture what they regard as more 'complex' understandings of the environment in their work. At the same time, they are confronted with established methodological tools, disciplinary infrastructures and institutional contexts that favor simplistic articulations of the environment as distinct and mainly individual-level variables. I show how researchers struggle with these simplistic articulations of nutrition, maternal bodies and social determinants as relevant environments, which are sometimes at odds with the researchers' own normative commitments and aspirations.

Topics & Concepts

Biosocial theoryNormativeDisciplineOddsFace (sociological concept)Sociology of health and illnessVariety (cybernetics)SociologyPsychologyEpistemologySocial psychologySocial scienceComputer scienceHealth careMachine learningEconomicsEconomic growthPersonalityLogistic regressionArtificial intelligencePhilosophyRace, Genetics, and SocietyBirth, Development, and HealthObesity and Health Practices
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