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Transforming health education to catalyze a global paradigm shift
systems thinking, complexity, and design thinking
pp. 119-131
Abstract
At the dawn of the twentieth century, the Flexner report catalyzed a transition in medical thought toward science-based research and practice. That paradigm shift resulted in a substantial improvement in human health. However, the advances that accompanied a biomedical reductionist paradigm—an approach to health concentrated on physiological minutia, professions working in silos, and a focus on episodic treatment—which surged exponentially after Flexner's report are not adequate for the complexity of today's health challenges. In this chapter, we make the case that we need a change in mindset similar to what resulted from Flexner's report: a historical paradigm shift from biological reductionism toward a complex social systems approach to health improvement. We introduce three overlapping and emerging perspectives that provide the theory, language, tools, and methods suitable for today's challenges: systems thinking, complexity thinking, and adaptive design. We also argue that some combination of these perspectives and approaches will provide the paradigm for the next century.
Publication details
Published in:
Sturmberg Joachim P. (2018) Putting systems and complexity sciences into practice: sharing the experience. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 119-131
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-73636-5_9
Full citation:
Swanson Chad, Widmer Matt (2018) „Transforming health education to catalyze a global paradigm shift: systems thinking, complexity, and design thinking“, In: J. P. Sturmberg (ed.), Putting systems and complexity sciences into practice, Dordrecht, Springer, 119–131.