Health and Social Organization: Towards a Health Policy for the 21st CenturyDavid Blane, Eric Brunner, Richard Wilkinson Routledge, 11/09/2002 - 344 من الصفحات There is widespread recognition that the most powerful determinants of health today are to be found in social, economic and cultural circumstances. These include: ecnomic growth, income distribution, consumption, work oganisation, unemployment and job insecurity, social and family structure, education and deprivation, and they are all aspects of 'social organisation'. In ^Health and Social Organisation leading British and North American researchers who bring together an invaluable collection of data on these issues, draw from the social sciences, epidemiology and biology. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 29
الصفحة viii
... male all - cause mortality 180 10.3 Scatter plot of Carstairs index scores against male all - cause mortality 181 11.1 Pathways linking early life with adult disease , ( a ) programming , ( b ) continuities in lifetime circumstances 189 ...
... male all - cause mortality 180 10.3 Scatter plot of Carstairs index scores against male all - cause mortality 181 11.1 Pathways linking early life with adult disease , ( a ) programming , ( b ) continuities in lifetime circumstances 189 ...
الصفحة 6
... male British doctor ' 399 would have worn a seat belt everyday for forty years without benefit to their survival . ' Elsewhere ( Rose 1985 ) he states that even if people are in the lowest risk category for all the behavioural risk ...
... male British doctor ' 399 would have worn a seat belt everyday for forty years without benefit to their survival . ' Elsewhere ( Rose 1985 ) he states that even if people are in the lowest risk category for all the behavioural risk ...
الصفحة 9
... the policy debate . Such questions of mechanism are being addressed in the Whitehall II study ( Marmot et al . 1991 ) of 10,308 male and female civil servants . Conventional risk factors were a Public health policy 9.
... the policy debate . Such questions of mechanism are being addressed in the Whitehall II study ( Marmot et al . 1991 ) of 10,308 male and female civil servants . Conventional risk factors were a Public health policy 9.
الصفحة 11
... decades this relationship reversed , such that , by 1987 , life expectancy for Canadian males and females was 1.7 and 1.6 years higher than for their American counterparts ( WHO 1989 ) . It would be difficult Public health policy 11.
... decades this relationship reversed , such that , by 1987 , life expectancy for Canadian males and females was 1.7 and 1.6 years higher than for their American counterparts ( WHO 1989 ) . It would be difficult Public health policy 11.
الصفحة 27
لقد وصلت إلى حد العرض المسموح لهذا الكتاب.
لقد وصلت إلى حد العرض المسموح لهذا الكتاب.
المحتوى
1 | |
19 | |
To prevent disease The need for a new approach | 21 |
The significance of socioeconomic factors in health for medical care and the National Health Service | 32 |
The social pattern of health and disease | 42 |
Environment and economic growth | 69 |
Social determinants of health The sociobiological translation | 71 |
Whats been said and whats been hid Population health global consumption and the role of national health data systems | 94 |
Education social circumstances and mortality | 171 |
Transmission of social and biological risk across the life course | 188 |
Unpaid work carers and health | 204 |
Work and the labour market | 233 |
Work and health Implications for individuals and society | 235 |
Health and work insecurity in young men | 255 |
The social and biological basis of cardiovascular disease in office workers | 272 |
Policy integration | 301 |
How can secular improvements in life expectancy be explained? | 109 |
The family and life course | 123 |
Patterns of attachment interpersonal relationships and health | 125 |
Family and education as determinants of health | 152 |
Health and social capital | 303 |
Index | 313 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
adjusted analysis associated attachment Attachment Theory behaviour biological birth weight Britain British Medical Journal cardiovascular caregiver caring cent central obesity Child Development childhood cholesterol cohort coronary heart disease cortisol countries deprivation determinants of health differences early economic growth educational attainment effects employment grade environment Epidemiology evidence expectancy experience fibrinogen Figure groups health at age health capital health status higher Household Survey ill health impaired glucose tolerance important improve income increased individual influence insecurity ischaemic heart disease Journal of Epidemiology levels London Malaise Inventory male Marmot measures non-carers occupational Odds ratios parents patterns physical poor population psychological psychosocial Public Health relationship reported risk factors scores self-reported general health shows sickness absence smoking social capital social class social gradient societies socioeconomic socioeconomic circumstances Sroufe stress Table tion variable waist-hip ratio well-being Whitehall II study Whitehall study women