GSTDTAP  > 气候变化
DOI10.1126/science.abd0342
Confronting illness with empathy
Frederick Rowe Davis
2020-07-31
发表期刊Science
出版年2020
英文摘要What is it about a road trip that so effectively locates a good story in time and place? In his new book, The Sensitives , Oliver Broudy recounts the story of an unusual road trip on which he recently embarked that provides a frame for a discussion of a mysterious ailment that has thus far defied scientific characterization. By way of introduction, Broudy notes that there are, at present, 85,000 synthetic chemicals circulating in our daily environments, including 9000 food additives, the vast majority of which have never been tested for potential effects on humans. In 2017 alone, 3.9 billion pounds of chemicals were dumped into the environment, he notes. Meanwhile, billions of metric tons of plastics (8.3 billion in 2015) accumulate around us. Cancer rates have also spiked, notes Broudy, and he cites drastic increases in other conditions, from autism to allergies. Enter the “sensitives,” as they call themselves, who report an array of chronic symptoms, most commonly fatigue, memory impairment, and muscle aches, which they attribute to an increased vulnerability to chemicals and other environmental triggers. But despite the high incidence of environmental illness (EI)—Broudy indicates that as much as 30% of the population may exhibit some environmental hypersensitivity—many nonsufferers, particularly in the medical and scientific communities, wonder if it is even real. To date, no one has identified a definitive biomarker for the disease. The symptoms that sufferers report vary widely, and uncertainty prevails, especially in the published literature. This, in Broudy's view, makes EI the defining disease of our time. The EI experience can come across as both specific to the individual and highly abstract. Yet Broudy refuses to dismiss the sensitives' accounts of their symptoms. Throughout his exploration, he remains skeptical yet empathetic. To guide his journey toward understanding EI and those it afflicts, Broudy embarks on a road trip with a sensitive named James, who knows both the disease and the places where sensitives seek relief from their symptoms. Woven throughout the story of their travels, extended reflections reveal the state of past and present research on EI. We learn, for example, about Claudia Miller, a professor of environmental and occupational medicine at the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio, who has developed a model to understand EI, which she calls toxicant-induced loss of tolerance (TILT). “Miller defined TILT as something like the inverse of addiction,” Broudy writes. “[I]t commenced with an exposure, and the exposure led to sensitivity—the opposite of tolerance. Thereafter, even minimal exposures could provoke outsized effects.” He notes parallels with the “rain barrel” theory, advanced by many sensitives, which holds that each individual has a personal toxicity threshold. Exceed the threshold, and illness follows. How did we come to live in a world so saturated in synthetic chemicals? To answer this question, Broudy recounts the story of British chemist William Henry Perkin, who, in 1856, discovered how to synthesize a deep-purple dye. Other chemists followed suit, producing a colorful palette of synthetic dyes. “From this rainbow our modern world of industrial chemicals emerged,” writes Broudy. Pharmaceuticals followed from the labs of Bayer and Monsanto, and in 1910 Fritz Haber successfully synthesized ammonia, a feat that won him the Nobel Prize in Chemistry and ushered in the era of agricultural chemistry. As the road trip proceeds, Broudy encounters additional environmental risks: mining operations and power plants fired by coal, for example. He uses this to transition the narrative toward a history of risk assessment, which breezes from the birth of modern insurance to the dawn of nuclear armaments. Here, he draws striking comparisons between EI and other diseases with diffuse etiologies, such as Gulf War illness, posttraumatic stress disorder, and neurasthenia. In Snowflake, Arizona, Broudy meets a community of sensitives, most of whom—like consumptives in the time of tuberculosis—were drawn to the warm, arid desert air. In representing the diversity of experience and symptomology, Broudy reveals EI to be a highly diffuse disease. His comparison of EI to tuberculosis before Robert Koch's discovery of the bacterium is apt. Traveling with Broudy, we learn much about an inscrutable disease, the people who live with it, the places where they find relief, and the discursive path through history and environmental health that has brought us to new levels of risk and uncertainty. With a tone that is both thoughtful and humorous, The Sensitives provides a model for how history, philosophy, research, clinical practice, and—above all—patient experience inform meaningful discourse about a disease that resists characterization at all stages.
领域气候变化 ; 资源环境
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文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/286850
专题气候变化
资源环境科学
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Frederick Rowe Davis. Confronting illness with empathy[J]. Science,2020.
APA Frederick Rowe Davis.(2020).Confronting illness with empathy.Science.
MLA Frederick Rowe Davis."Confronting illness with empathy".Science (2020).
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