115 research outputs found
What Shapes Health-Related Behaviors? The Role of Social Factors
Outlines how social factors such as education, income, and neighborhood conditions affect stress levels and access to healthy choices and medical care, in turn shaping health-related behaviors. Lists promising programs for creating healthier environments
Early Childhood Experiences: Laying the Foundation for Health Across a Lifetime
Outlines current research on how factors such as parents' education, income, and race/ethnicity affect children's development and health throughout life, as well as how early childhood development programs can mitigate socioeconomic disadvantages
Race and Socioeconomic Factors Affect Opportunities for Better Health
Examines racial/ethnic disparities in mortality and diabetes rates and the links between income and health within and across groups. Explores how race/ethnicity affects income at a given education level or socioeconomic conditions at a given income level
Where We Live Matters for Our Health: Neighborhoods and Health
Details how a neighborhood's physical and socioeconomic environments, such as safety and access to fresh produce, exercise opportunities, and medical services, affect residents' health. Highlights local interventions to make neighborhoods healthier
Overcoming Obstacles to Health
Social differences in health can be reduced, but only if solutions can be identified to address their root causes. The greatest potential lies in solutions that will help people choose health. That means both strengthening individuals’ ability to make healthy choices and removing obstacles to choosing health. It also means creating more opportunities to be healthy. The human impact of health is clear: Health is essential to well-being and full participation in society, and ill health can mean suffering, disability and loss of life. The economic impacts of health have become increasingly apparent. If current trends continue, medical care costs, now about 16 percent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP),1 will reach 20 percent of GDP by 2015.2 The costs of medical care and insurance are now out of reach for many households, pushing some into bankruptcy. These costs are draining employers’ resources, threatening the bottom line of many American businesses. Federal, state and local health care spending is straining government budgets. Our society’s aging and the obesity epidemic will further increase costs of care
Where We Live Matters for Our Health: The Links Between Housing and Health
Explains how physical conditions within homes, conditions in the neighborhoods, and housing affordability affect physical and mental health. Looks at past initiatives and offers strategies for improving health through public and private housing policies
Über einige Mineralwasservorkommen am Harznordrand
Die Hercynia publiziert Originalbeiträge mit dem Schwerpunkt Ökologie (mit ihren vielseitigen Aspekten der Biodiversität), Botanik, Zoologie, Geologie und Geografie, den anwendungsorientierten Bereichen des Natur- und Umweltschutzes, sowie der Land- und Forstwirtschaft
Pandemic Influenza Planning in the United States from a Health Disparities Perspective
Preparedness plans must account for the fact that illness and death rates may differ for members of some socioeconomic and racial/ethnic groups during a pandemic
Kit Kat in the Hat
Kit Kat in the Hat was an entry in Myrin Library\u27s 11th Annual Edible Books Festival at Ursinus College.https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/ebf/1005/thumbnail.jp
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