This book reviews public health activities such as awareness campaigns, health education, and strategies for health policy based on recent epidemiological studies that provide insights into epigenetic processes caused by environmental factors and developmental plasticity. It provides the latest concepts and findings on the public health aspects of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHa D) research regarding early prevention of non-communicable diseases (NCDs). Attention is especially paid to key issues, including strategies for the effective prevention of NCDs in developmental stages of life and younger generations rather than in adults and the elderly.
Public Health Aspects in Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHa D) is structured in two parts; the first focuses on general remarks reviewing specific recommendations, practical methods and protocols, and future goals regarding public health aspects, while the second presents brief profiles of individual cohorts and consortia studies. This collection will benefit both new and established researchers, as well as students in the fields of epidemiology, clinical medicine, nutrition, education, and public health who are seeking comprehensive information on DOHa D and preemptive medicine.
Inhoudsopgave
Part 1 General Remarks.- 1 Maternal exposure to environmental chemicals and health outcomes later in life.- 2 DOHa D cohort studies and public health implications in Japan.- 3 DOHa D interventions: Opportunities during adolescence and the periconceptional period.- 4 Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHa D) Cohorts and Interventions: Status and Perspective.- 5 Science, Technology and Innovation Policy: Proposal of Preemptive/Precision Medicine Strategy (including DOHa D Part 2 Public Health Aspect in Each Cohort or Consortium.- 6 The Origins Project.- 7 Growing Up in New Zealand – a pre-birth cohort study of child wellbeing and development.- 8 Public Health Aspect of the Growing Up in Singapore Towards healthy Outcomes (GUSTO) mother-offspring cohort.- 9 Hokkaido Study on Environment and Children’s Health.- 10 Chiba study of Mother and Children’s Health (C-MACH).- 11 Hamamatsu Birth Cohort for Mothers and Children (HBC Study).- 12 Birth Cohort Consortium of Asia (Bi CCA): Current Children’s Environmental Health Issues in Asia and Future Perspectives.
Over de auteur
Editors;
Fumihiro Sata
Chuo University Health Center, Tokyo, Japan
Hideoki Fukuoka
Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan
Mark Hanson
Academic Unit of Human Development and Health, University of Southampton, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton, United Kingdom