• J Med Humanit · Mar 2021

    Planetary Health Humanities-Responding to COVID Times.

    • Bradley Lewis.
    • Gallatin School of Individualized Study, New York University, 1 Washington Sq. #609, New York, NY, 10003, USA. BL466@nyu.edu.
    • J Med Humanit. 2021 Mar 1; 42 (1): 3-16.

    AbstractThe coronavirus pandemic has shattered our world with increased morbidity, mortality, and personal/social sufferings. At the time of this writing, we are in a biomedical race for protective equipment, viral testing, and vaccine creation in an effort to respond to COVID threats. But what is the role of health humanities in these viral times? This article works though interdisciplinary connections between health humanities, the planetary health movement, and environmental humanities to conceptualize the emergence of "planetary health humanities." The goal of this affinity linkage is to re-story health humanities toward promotion of planetary health and community well-being. Wellbeing is critical because the main driver of environmental destruction and decreasing planetary health is coming from non-sustainable definitions of wellbeing. We need the arts and humanities to help reimagine the possibility of a sustainable community wellbeing. For health humanities, a basic role and narrative identity starts to emerge-we should become a planetary health (and well-being) humanities.

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