Josh Artus Josh Artus

Planetary Dysregulation, Capitalism, & Healthcare

The intention of this audio project is to discuss the links between systems and imaginations rooted in supremacy, the dysregulation of planetary systems, and the poor health outcomes being experienced by peoples who are racialised and minoritised.

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

The Need to Move from Care to Healing

Disability justice organisers are constantly experimenting with a multitude of takes on “care collectives/care webs”: organising groups that explore possibilities for getting the needs and dreams of disabled people met outside of state systems or charities, turning to their communities to create care that is sustainable, fulfilling, and joyful for everyone involved.

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

Gender, Care, and Equity

The key takeaway is that sex and gender are one way of conceptualising a complex ecosystem made up of multiple cells and microbes which digests, reproduces, thinks, and loves, rather than a universal truth.

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

Heating & a Healing Home

When people can no longer use their home to heal and feel that they are in a place of rest, they are at greater risk of not restoring. The home in the case of higher costs is no longer a healer but a harmer.

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

Growing Up in Crisis

As planetary dysregulation continues without systemic intervention, the threat to children’s health will continue to rise. It seems redundant to say, but we should prioritise the health of children as they are our future ancestors, who have imaginations and futures to fulfil. 

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

Depression as a Brain-Body Disease and its Links to Air Pollution

Depression is recognised as ‘a major contributor to the overall global burden of disease’ and has both a complex aetiology and symptomatology. It is often framed as a mental health problem, however, the more we understand the more we uncover its physical symptomology. Additionally, it is important to understand how environmental factors, such as air pollution are contributing to its prevalence. 

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

The Environmental Factors of Diabetes

Simply saying Black or Indigenous Peoples experience Type 2 Diabetes at a higher rate, leaves room for further racialisation as it could add to the narrative of genetic determinism, which blames a person’s biological make-up for disease rather than considering ecological factors.

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

The History of Disease

It's becoming increasingly clear that the relationship between human health and disease is a complex and dynamic interplay between the physical and social environment and the body.

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

Obesity & Trauma

This report will take an ecological approach, focusing on the bidirectional pathway between trauma and obesity to highlight the disparity between scientific evidence and communication around obesity, as well as the psychosocial factors that contribute to, and maintain, this disparity. This is to ensure health organisations and policies support a holistic and equitable prevention strategy for obesity.

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

Health as Ecological

There is a need to understand the history behind framing health as individual choices or behaviours to better appreciate why an ecological health approach looks like and its significance in eradicating health inequities.

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

Dear ‘Stop the Stink’ Campaign

On the 3rd August 2021, we attended the public meeting held between Newcastle-under-Lyme Borough Council, Public Health England, Staffordshire County Council, the Environment Agency, and the community where Walleys Quarry Landfill site is located. This letter is a list of our thoughts and concerns based on our experience as neuroscientists working on public health issues.

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

Lived Experience, Communities, and Health

This document will look at how industry gaslights communities, the mistakes science makes, and the significance of listening and acknowledging the lived experience. This report is for both practitioners and citizens who are experiencing environmental and health injustice.

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

An ecological definition of health through the stress response

A stressor is defined as a novel threatening environmental agent that alters the baseline human biological system in either of two ways: bringing the system to an unstable biological state, or slowing down the system’s internal response so that it cannot reach equilibrium.

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

Covid-19 & its Relationship to Air Pollution

In the context of Covid-19, air pollution presents a particularly insidious hazard given that the disease affects respiratory and cardio-vascular systems. These two systems are mechanically sensitive to air pollution meaning that air pollution directly damages the mechanics and as consequence the function of lungs, heart, and the circulatory system.

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

Obesity, Classism and Racism

There are various problems with targeting a community based on their race, specifically in the context of health. To say “Black community” or “Indigenous Community” is a misnomer as it doesn’t see the person to place relationship, which is essential to understanding health.

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

Air Pollution, Susceptibility, and COVID-19 Learnings

In any given area, there will be people who are suffering greatly from the consequences of air pollution whilst others may not see any consequences. This phenomenon is worth understanding, rather than dismissing it as not statistically significant.

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Josh Artus Josh Artus

COVID-19 & Biological Inequality; a London Data Study

This paper looks to approach the inequitable prevalence of COVID-19 from a biological perspective, drawing a clear throughline between human health and urban environments. Specifically, its relation to COVID-19 in BAME communities of London.

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