Date of Completion
Fall 12-1-2012
Thesis Advisor(s)
Lawrence Silbart
Honors Major
Allied Health
Disciplines
Other Medicine and Health Sciences | Other Public Health | Public Health
Abstract
Over the past thirty years, the incidence of type 2 diabetes and obesity has greatly increased in the United States. This paper compares the living environment of hunter-gathers to that of modern humans, in diet and activity levels, and discusses the recent increase of type 2 diabetes as a 'disease of civilization'. To address these changes in dietary composition and activity levels, an alternative agricultural model, permaculture edible forest gardening, is proposed. Permaculture edible forest gardening is an agricultural model which mimics natural ecosystem structure while consisting of entirely edible, perennial plant species. Permaculture edible forest gardens can potentially play a role in the mitigation of the diet and activity level related risk factors for type 2 diabetes.
Recommended Citation
Lehner, Brett Christopher, "Permaculture and Public Health: Mitigation of the Lifestyle Risk Factors for Type 2 Diabetes Through the Establishment of Permaculture Edible Forest Gardens" (2012). Honors Scholar Theses. 284.
https://digitalcommons.lib.uconn.edu/srhonors_theses/284