Health and Inequality: Geographical PerspectivesSAGE, 30/12/2003 - 344 من الصفحات `At last! A tour de force on cities and health by someone who knows that geography matters. This is a groundbreaking text, preoccupied as much with health and well-being as with death, disease and despair. It is concerned with who wins and who loses from the social and spatial patterning of risk... Combining breadth of coverage with depth of analysis, Health and Inequality provides an intricate map of harmful spaces and healing places, together with some guidelines on how to get from one to the other′ - Professor Susan Smith, Ogilvie Professor of Geography, University of Edinburgh ′Too often as health professionals we remain embedded in nursing and medical literature neglecting the opportunities offered through engaging with other bodies of knowledge. Such an opportunity presents itself in this book which draws on work undertaken by geographers that can help us in our thinking about health inequalities. The strength of this work lies in its aim to ensure that place and space are recognised as significant factors in health inequalities′ - Community Practitioner Health and Inequality presents a comprehensive analysis of how geographical perspectives can be used to understand the problems of health inequalities. The text has three principal themes: to discuss the geography of health inequality and to examine strategies for reducing disadvantage; to review and develop the theoretical basis for a geographical analysis of these problems - the discussion will illustrate how theoretical developments can help in the design and evaluation of intervention; and to explain how different methodologies in the geography of health, both quantitative and qualitative, can be applied in research - demonstrating the complementarity between them. By relating theoretical arguments to specific landscapes, Health and Inequality will be a key resource for understanding the articulation between theory and empirical methods for understanding health variation in urban areas. |
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النتائج 1-5 من 61
... epidemiology, using the example of malaria (based on May, 1958; Learmonth, 1988) Interlocking life cycles involved in transmission of malaria (after Learmonth, 1988: Figure 10.6) Black box epidemiology Residential distribution of sample ...
... epidemiological landscapes: using GIS methods to estimate geographical variation in risk of malaria in Kenya An example of environmental epidemiological strategies for studying the relationship of asthma to air pollution Mental and ...
... epidemiological transition The importance for health of urbanization Sustainable cities? The significance of the 'urban penalty' Health inequalities in rural areas Understanding health inequality: the whole system perspective Landscapes ...
... epidemiological spaces, which correspond to the geographically varying risk of specific diseases. Their example focuses on the use of time-space mapping of the geographical diffusion of contagious disease considered in more detail in ...
... Liverpool E. London and City S.E. London Camden. FIGURE 1.2 International variations in life expectancy, 1999 (WHO, 2000a, Table 2) HEALTH AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT: THE EPIDEMIOLOGICAL TRANSITION FIGURE 1.5 Deaths. HEALTH AND INEQUALITY 10.
المحتوى
1 | |
27 | |
28 | |
52 | |
4 Landscapes of Poverty and Wealth | 84 |
care and commodification | 113 |
populations air water and ground | 151 |
Aspects of health in urban settings | 191 |
7 The Geography of Mental Health in Cities | 192 |
the example of tuberculosis | 226 |
9 Health Geography in Strategies to Improve Public Health | 250 |
References | 285 |
Index | 323 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
Health and Inequality: Geographical Perspectives <span dir=ltr>Sarah Curtis</span> لا تتوفر معاينة - 2004 |