» Articles » PMID: 30654442

Preventive Medicine for Person, Place, and Planet: Revisiting the Concept of High-Level Wellness in the Planetary Health Paradigm

Overview
Publisher MDPI
Date 2019 Jan 19
PMID 30654442
Citations 3
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Experts in preventive medicine and public health have long-since recognized that health is more than the absence of disease, and that each person in the 'waiting room' and beyond manifests the social/political/economic ecosystems that are part of their total lived experience. The term planetary health-denoting the interconnections between the health of person and place at all scales-emerged from the environmental and preventive health movements of the 1970⁻1980s. Roused by the 2015 Lancet Commission on Planetary Health report, the term has more recently penetrated mainstream academic and medical discourse. Here, we discuss the relevance of planetary health in the era of personalized medicine, gross environmental concerns, and a crisis of non-communicable diseases. We frame our discourse around high-level wellness-a concept of vitality defined by Halbert L. Dunn (1896⁻1975); high-level wellness was defined as an integrated method of functioning which is oriented toward maximizing the potential of individuals within the total lived environment. Dunn maintained that high-level wellness is also applicable to organizations, communities, nations, and humankind as a whole-stating further that global high-level wellness is a product of the vitality and sustainability of the Earth's natural systems. He called for a universal philosophy of living. Researchers and healthcare providers who focus on lifestyle and environmental aspects of health-and understand barriers such as authoritarianism and social dominance orientation-are fundamental to maintaining trans-generational vitality at scales of person, place, and planet.

Citing Articles

Nursing and planetary health: A discussion article.

Meherali S, Nisa S, Aynalem Y, Lassi Z Womens Health (Lond). 2025; 21:17455057241311955.

PMID: 40072007 PMC: 11905079. DOI: 10.1177/17455057241311955.


Exiting the Anthropocene: Achieving personal and planetary health in the 21st century.

Prescott S, Logan A, Bristow J, Rozzi R, Moodie R, Redvers N Allergy. 2022; 77(12):3498-3512.

PMID: 35748742 PMC: 10083953. DOI: 10.1111/all.15419.


The need for biodiversity champions in psychiatry: the entwined crises of climate change and ecological collapse.

Krzanowski J BJPsych Bull. 2021; 45(4):238-243.

PMID: 34103120 PMC: 8499615. DOI: 10.1192/bjb.2021.44.


Global Medicine, Parasites, and Tasmania.

Goldsmid J, Bettiol S Trop Med Infect Dis. 2020; 5(1).

PMID: 31906394 PMC: 7157593. DOI: 10.3390/tropicalmed5010007.

References
1.
Mckee M . Health professionals must uphold truth and human rights. Eur J Public Health. 2017; 27(1):6-7. DOI: 10.1093/eurpub/ckw243. View

2.
Casey J, Wilcox H, Hirsch A, Pollak J, Schwartz B . Associations of unconventional natural gas development with depression symptoms and disordered sleep in Pennsylvania. Sci Rep. 2018; 8(1):11375. PMC: 6063969. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-29747-2. View

3.
DUNN H . High-level wellness--a way of life. MLN Bull. 1968; 16(4):3-6. View

4.
SARGENT 2nd F . Man-environment--problems for public health. Am J Public Health. 1972; 62(5):628-33. PMC: 1530249. DOI: 10.2105/ajph.62.5.628. View

5.
Berry T . A new era. Healing the injuries we have inflicted on our planet. Health Prog. 1992; 73(2):60-3. View