681 research outputs found
If a Calvinist Had Coffee With a Feminist
Dr. Julia Stronks presented this paper at the Calvinism for the 21st Century Conference at Dordt College, April 2010
The association of maternal prenatal psychosocial stress with vascular function in the child at age 10-11 years: findings from the Avon longitudinal study of parents and children
Objective To investigate whether (1) maternal psychosocial stress (depression/anxiety) during pregnancy is associated with offspring vascular function and (2) whether any association differs depending on the gestational timing of exposure to stress. We also investigated whether any association is likely to be due to intrauterine mechanisms by (3) comparing with the association of paternal stress with offspring vascular function and (4) examining whether any prenatal association is explained by maternal postnatal stress.
Methods and results Associations were examined in a UK birth cohort, with offspring outcomes (systolic and diastolic blood pressure, SBP and DBP, endothelial function assessed by brachial artery flow-mediated dilatation (FMD); arterial stiffness assessed by carotid to radial pulse wave velocity (PWV), brachial artery distensibility (DC), and brachial artery diameter (BD) assessed at age 10–11 years (n = 4318). Maternal depressive symptoms and anxiety were assessed at 18 and 32 weeks gestation and 8 months postnatally. Paternal symptoms were assessed at week 19. With the exception of DBP and BD, there were no associations of maternal depressive symptoms with any of the vascular outcomes. Maternal depressive and anxiety symptoms were associated with lower offspring DBP and wider BD, though the latter attenuated to the null with adjustment for confounding factors. Paternal symptoms were not associated with offspring outcomes. Maternal postnatal depressive symptoms were associated with lower offspring SBP.
Conclusions We found no evidence to support the hypothesis that maternal stress during pregnancy adversely affects offspring vascular function at age 10–12 years via intrauterine mechanisms
The development of a strategy for tackling health inequalities in the Netherlands.
Over the past decade, the Dutch government has pursued a research-based
approach to tackle socioeconomic inequalities in health. We report on the
most recent phase in this approach: the development of a strategy to
reduce health inequalities in the Netherlands by an independent committee.
In addition, we will reflect on the way the report of this committee has
influenced health policy and practice.A 6-year research and development
program was conducted which covered a number of different policy options
and consisted of 12 intervention studies. The study results were discussed
with experts and policy makers. A government advisory committee developed
a comprehensive strategy that intends to reduce socioeconomic inequalities
in disability-free life expectancy by 25% in 2020. The strategy covers 4
different entry-points for reducing socioeconomic inequalities in health,
contains 26 specific recommendations, and includes 11 quantitative policy
targets. Further research and development efforts are also
recommended.Although the Dutch approach has been influenced by similar
efforts in other European countries, particularly the United Kingdom and
Sweden, it is unique in terms of its emphasis on building a systematic
evidence-base for interventions and policies to reduce health
inequalities. Both researchers and policy-makers were involved in the
process, and there are clear indications that some of the recommendations
are being adopted by health policy-makers and health care practice,
although more so at the local than at the national level
Should equity in health be target number 1?
Policy measures to reduce socioeconomic health differences (SEHD) must be preceded by an analysis of the possibilities and desirability of a reduction. This paper argues that it is necessary to pursue equality in health, conceived as equal opportunities to achieve health. This principle is justified as part of the principle of maximizing individual freedom of choice, and requires that everyone has the opportunity to be as healthy as possible. By means of this principle a distinction can be made between unjust, unavoidable, and acceptable health inequalities. The determinants of SEHD which lead to inequalities considered unjust must be subject to policy. These are living conditions (physical and social environment and health care) and conditions of choice (e.g. the knowledge of an individual about the health risks of a certain behaviour). Even if SEHD are considered inequities, sometimes conflicting interests will make it difficult to propose a health policy to redress these inequities. These are partly the consequence of the intersectoral character of a policy aimed at equality of opportunities to attain health, in which the importance of health has to be weighed against other goals. Moreover the impact of such a policy on the individual free choice has to be critically weighed. Finally in the context of health care policy, conflicts between the principle of equality and maximizing health can be expected
One Size Does Not Fit All: Meeting the Health Care Needs of Diverse Populations
Proposes a framework for meeting patients' cultural and linguistic needs: policies and procedures that support cultural competence, data collection, population-tailored services, and internal and external collaborations. Includes a self-assessment tool
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