Now showing items 36-55 of 55

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      Improving equity in health by addressing social determinants 

      Unknown author (World Health Organization, 2011)

      This recently published book highlights actions to improve health equity based on findings from the nine global Knowledge Networks that were established during the WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health. Their task was to synthesize existing evidence and identify effective and appropriate actions to improve health equity in nine thematic areas: - globalization; - gender; - social exclusion; - early child development; - urban settings; - employment conditions; - health systems; - public health programs; and - measurement and evidence. ...
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      Indigenous health part 2: the underlying causes of the health gap 

      King, Malcolm; Smith, Alexandra; Gracey, Michael (The Lancet, 2009)
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      Moving towards culturally competent, migrant-inclusive health systems: a comparative study of Malaysia and Thailand 

      Nicola S. Pocock; Rapeepong Suphanchaimat (the Asia Pacific Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, 2021)

      Migrants are seldom included in policy discussions on the provision of health care, and in country policy reforms towards health for all. In addition, evidence on health care for migrant populations to inform and guide policy makers is limited. This Comparative Country Study (CCS) uses mixed-method approaches to analyse the extent to which two middle-income countries – Thailand and Malaysia, have culturally competent, migrant-inclusive health systems. The countries have taken different approaches to developing a migrant-inclusive health system. ...
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      Murmurs of Politics and Economics 

      Lilic, Nikola (New England Journal of Medicine, 2018-09-27)
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      National health inequality monitoring: current challenges and opportunities 

      Hosseinpoor, Ahmad Reza; Bergen, Nicole; Schlotheuber, Anne; Boerma, Ties (Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group, 2018-12-03)

      National health inequality monitoring needs considerably more investment to realize equityoriented health improvements in countries, including advancement towards the Sustainable Development Goals. Following an overview of national health inequality monitoring and the associated resource requirements, we highlight challenges that countries may encounter when setting up, expanding or strengthening national health inequality monitoring systems, and discuss opportunities and key initiatives that aim to address these challenges. We provide specific ...
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      Opening the GATE to inclusion for people with disabilities 

      Khasnabis, Chapal; Mirza, Zafar; MacLachlan, Malcolm (The Lancet, 2015)
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      Pursuing Health Equity 

      Weil, Alan R. (Health Affairs, 2017-06)
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      Rethinking society for the 21st century: Report of the International Panel on Social Progress 

      International Panel on Social Progress (Cambridge University Press, 2018)
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      Social innovation: what it is, why it matters and how it can be accelerated 

      Mulgan, Geoff; Tucker, Simon; Ali, Rushanara; Sanders, Ben; University of Oxford; Skoll Centre for Social Entrepreneurship (Young Foundation, 2007)

      This report examines how social innovation happens in NGOs, the public sector, movements, networks and markets. It presents an analysis of the history, the theory and the process, paving a way for social innovation to play an increasingly significant role in society. Huge energies – and resources – are devoted to innovation in science and technology. But far less attention has been paid to social innovation, despite pressing needs in fields as diverse as chronic disease and climate change. This report examines the growing importance of social ...
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      The COVID-19 pandemic underscores the need for an equity-focused global health agenda 

      Jensen, N.; Kelly, A. H.; Avendano, M. (2021-12)

      Over the past few months, COVID-19 has ravaged health systems and economies in countries across the world. While many would argue that a pandemic of respiratory disease was predictable, the systematic failures of the response came as a surprise. From the shortage of hospital beds and medical equipment to the gross insufficiencies in national surveillance systems, supply chains and laboratory capacity, COVID-19 has laid bare the health care limitations that ‘global north’ and ‘global south’ share. A stark set of differences, however, run across ...
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      The equity action spectrum: taking a comprehensive approach : guidance for addressing inequities in health 

      Whitehead, Margaret; Loring, Belinda; Povall, Sue; Organisation mondiale de la santé; Bureau régional de l'Europe (World Health Organization, Regional Office for Europe, 2014)

      While population health indicators have improved across Europe overall, that improvement has not been experienced equally everywhere, or by all. This is one of a series of policy briefs that describe practical actions to address health inequities, especially in relation to tobacco, alcohol, obesity and injury, the priority public health challenges facing Europe. It offers policy-makers and public health professionals the tools and guidance to implement the Health 2020 vision – the new health policy framework for Europe developed by WHO/Europe ...
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      The future of global health education: training for equity in global health 

      Adams, Lisa V.; Wagner, Claire M.; Nutt, Cameron T.; Binagwaho, Agnes (BMC Medical Education, 2016)

      Background: Among academic institutions in the United States, interest in global health has grown substantially: by the number of students seeking global health opportunities at all stages of training, and by the increase in institutional partnerships and newly established centers, institutes, and initiatives to house global health programs at undergraduate, public health and medical schools. Witnessing this remarkable growth should compel health educators to question whether the training and guidance that we provide to students today is appropriate, ...
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      The New Homelessness Revisited 

      Lee, Barrett A.; Tyler, Kimberly A.; Wright, James D. (Annual Review of Sociology, 2010)

      The new homelessness has drawn sustained attention from scholars over the past three decades. Definitional inconsistencies and data limitations rendered early work during this period largely speculative in nature. Thanks to conceptual, theoretical, and methodological progress, however, the research literature now provides a fuller understanding of homelessness. Contributions by sociologists and other social scientists since the mid-1990s differentiate among types of homelessness, provide credible demographic estimates, and show how being homeless ...
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      The Process of Social Innovation 

      Mulgan, Geoff (2006-04)
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      The “Triangle That Moves the Mountain” and Thai Alcohol Policy Development: Four Case Studies 

      Thamarangsi, Thaksaphon (Contemporary Drug Problems, 2009)

      The “Triangle that Moves the Mountain” is a conceptualized strategy initiated as a social tool for solving difficult social problems, by simultaneously strengthening capacity in three interrelated sectors: (1) creation of knowledge; (2) social movement; and (3) political involvement. The concept has been claimed as the basis of many successes in various Thai policy arenas. This article describes the strategy implications of four alcohol policy development case studies. The first case is the establishment process for the Thai Health Promotion ...
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      Transforming the economic lives of the ultra-poor 

      Balboni, Clare; Bandiera, Oriana; Burgess, Robin; Kaul, Upaasna (International Growth Centre, 2015)

      Despite considerable progress in recent decades, nearly 1 billion people worldwide live below the international extreme poverty line of $1.90 per day. A group that has been particularly hard to reach with anti-poverty programmes are the ‘ultra-poor’. With low assets and few skills, the ultra-poor work largely in insecure wage labour, do not participate in modern economic growth and have been difficult to target with credit and human capital policies.
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      We Have the Tools to Reverse the Rise in Inequality 

      Blanchard, Olivier; Rodrik, Dani (PIIE Peterson Institute for International Economics, 2019-11)
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      What does universal health coverage mean? 

      O'Connell, Thomas; Rasanathan, Kumanan; Chopra, Mickey (The Lancet, 2014)