Mismatch
Why Our World No Longer Fits Our Bodies
ISBN13: 9780199228386ISBN10: 0199228388
Paperback,
272 pages
Mar 2008,
In Stock
Price:
$19.95 (01)
CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title, 2007
Description
Our bodies evolved to allow our ancestors the best chance of survival as hunter-gatherers in the Savannah. Our brains, on the other hand, have allowed us to develop complex societies, cultures, and lifestyles, far removed from those of our ancestors. As a result, write Peter Gluckman and Mark Hanson in Mismatch, we have created a modern, artificial world that is painfully out of tune with our evolved bodies.In a compelling narrative that begins with the Sherpa in Nepal, Gluckman and Hanson, both leading medical scientists, draw on the latest research, bringing together concepts from evolutionary biology, developmental science, medicine, anthropology and ecology to describe the nature of this mismatch, its consequences, and how we may counter it. The authors reveal that this mismatch has led to the current deadly explosion in "lifestyle" diseases such as diabetes and obesity, and it may well lead to increasingly frequent epidemics. There are broader consequences too for societies, such as the falling age of puberty, with its attendant mismatch with psychological maturity, and at the other end of life, the implications of increasing longevity. Is there any way out? Yes, say the authors. They propose that intervention in early human development, alongside a better focus on the health of potential mothers, can make future generations better suited to the modern world.
In this remarkable and lucidly written book, Gluckman and Hanson identify a profound and growing problem that we ignore at our peril.
Features
- A fascinating look at a growing and deadly mismatch affecting the developed world: a mismatch that originates in our evolutionary history, that is influenced by development processes in the womb, and takes its toll as we grow to adulthood.
- With a foreword by Sir Robert Winston.
- Encompasses lifestyle diseases, epigenetics, evolutionary biology, and perinatal medicine.
- The rapidly increasing incidence of diseases like heart disease, diabetes, and obesity are now considered to be a 'public health timebomb'--the authors take a forward-looking and at times controversial perspective on how we might tackle the problem.
- Provides an accessible account of the interplay of genes and the environment--one of the most exciting areas of research in biology today.
About the Author(s)
Peter Gluckman is University Distinguished Professor, Professor of Pediatrics and Perinatal Biology, and Director of the Liggins Institute for Medical Research and the National Center for Growth and Development, at the University of Auckland.
Mark Hanson directs the Centre for Developmental Origins of Health and Disease at the University of Southampton, and is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and Honorary Professor at the University of Auckland.


