Abstract

This essay aims to analyze the epidemiology of physical activity as a practical and epistemological field in dispute, based on the theoretical framework of international critical epidemiology. From this scientific point of view, the epidemiology of physical activity is radically marked by epistemological-health colonialism. This brand is expressed in the theoretical-practical distance from critical epidemiological thinking formulated in the global south, producing an artificial regional dependency and deep frustration in those who want to generate transformations in contemporary ways of living. It is suggested that a critical epidemiology of body practices is possible and necessary. In other words, the epidemiology developed in the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean can dialectically understand the determination, distribution and social reproduction of the phenomenon of bodily practices, since it resumes its critical formulations and intercultural science.

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