Social justice has always been a core value driving public health. Today, much of the etiology of avoidable disease is rooted in inequitable social conditions brought on by disparities in wealth and power and reproduced through ongoing forms of oppression, exploitation, and marginalization.
Tackling Health Inequities raises questions and provides a starting point for health practitioners ready to reorient public health practice to address the fundamental causes of health inequities. This reorientation involves restructuring the organization, culture and daily work of public health. Tackling Health Inequities is meant to inspire readers to imagine or envision public health practice and their role in ways that question contemporary thinking and assumptions, as emerging trends, social conditions, and policies generate increasing inequities in health.
                                
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                                                          This book raises questions and provides a starting point for health practitioners ready to reorient public health practice to address the root causes of health inequities.
                                                      
 
                                                                            
                                  PART I  INTRODUCTION: FRAMEWORKS, PERSPECTIVES, EVIDENCE
Chapter 1. Tackling Health Inequities: A Framework for Analysis 
    Richard Hofrichter
Chapter 2.  Why Health Equity?   
  Amartya Sen
Chapter 3.  Health Equity and Social Justice
  Fabienne Peter
Chapter 4.  United States: Social Inequality and the Burden of Poor Health 
  Laura D. Kubzansky, Nancy Krieger, Ichiro Kawachi, Beverly Rockhill, 
 Gillian K. Steel and Lisa F. Berkman
Chapter 5. A Framework for Measuring Health Inequity 
  Yukiko Asada
Chapter 6. Promoting Social Justice Through Public Health Policies, Programs, and  
Services
Alonzo Plough
PART II: RACISM, CLASS EXPLOITATION, GENDER DISCRIMINATION AND HEALTH: EXPOSING THE ROOTS
Chapter 7.  Structural Racism and Community Building 
Anne K. Kubisch, Keith Lawrence, Stacey Sutton, Gretchen Susi, and Karen Fulbright-Anderson
Chapter 8.  Coronary Heart Disease, Chronic Inflammation, and Pathogenic Social  
Hierarchy: A Biological Limit to Possible Reductions in Morbidity and Mortality 
Rodrick Wallace, Deborah Wallace, and Robert G. Wallace
Chapter 9.  Social Sources of Racial Disparities in Health 
  David Williams and Pamela Braboy Jackson
Chapter 10. Class Exploitation and Psychiatric Disorders
  Carles Muntaner, Carme Borrell and Haejoo Chung
Chapter 11. Beyond the Inequality Hypothesis: Class, Neo-liberalism, and 
     Health Inequalities
  David Coburn
Chapter 12. Gender Inequity in Health: Why It Exists and How We Can Change It 
  Gita Sen and Piroska Ostlin
PART III: PRACTITIONERS TAKE ACTION: STRATEGIES FOR ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE AND WORKING WITH COMMUNITIES
Chapter 13.  Initiating Social Justice Action through Dialogue in a Local 
  Health Department: The Ingham County Experience and Beyond 
Doak Bloss
Chapter 14. The Metro Louisville Center for Health Equity: Expanding the Circle of 
Engagement
  Adewale Troutman
Chapter 15. Exploring the Intersection of Public Health and Social Justice: the Bay Area 
Regional Health Inequities Initiative 
Njoke Thomas and Bob Prentice
Chapter 16. Using Our Voice: Forging a Public Health Practice for Social Justice 
  Rajiv Bhatia, June Weintraub, Lili Farhang, Karen Yu and Paula Jones
Chapter 17. Estimation of Health Benefits From a Local Living Wage Ordinance
  Rajiv Bhatia and Mitchell Katz
Chapter 18. Protecting Health with Environmental Impact Assessment: A Case Study of 
  San Francisco Land Use Decision-Making Study in Health Equity Practice 
  Rajiv Bhatia
Chapter 19. The Community Action Model in a Public Health Department Setting
  Alma Avila, Alyonik Hrushow, Susana Hennessey Lavery, Mele Lau 
Smith, Diane Reed, and Melinda Moore
Chapter 20. Tackling the Root Causes of Health Disparities through  Community 
Capacity Building 
Anthony Iton
Chapter 21. Institutionalizing Health Equity and Social Justice in King County, 
Washington 
Ngozi Oleru, Michael Gedeon, and Matias Valenzuela
Chapter 22. Street Science: Local Knowledge and Environmental Justice 
  Jason Corburn
Chapter 23. Measuring Social Determinants of Health Inequities: The Health Equity 
Index 
Baker Salsbury, Elaine O'Keefe, and Jennifer Kertanis
Chapter 24. Place Matters: Building Partnerships Among Communities and Local Public 
Health Departments 
Gail Christopher, Vincent Lafronza, and Natalie Burke
PART IV:  SHIFTING CONSCIOUSNESS AND PARADIGMS 
Chapter 25. Strategies for Educating and Mobilizing the Public: Developing a Health 
Equity Campaign with California Newsreel's Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality 
Making Us Sick? 
Larry Adelman
Chapter 26. Talking About Public Health 
  Lawrence Wallack and Regina Lawrence
Chapter 27.  Helping Public Health Matter 
  Makani Themba Nixon
Chapter 28. The Ethics of the Medical Model in Addressing the Root Causes of Health 
Disparities in Local Health Practice 
Anthony Iton
Chapter 29. Teaching Social Inequalities in Health: Barriers and Opportunities 
  Carles Muntaner and Haejoo Chung
APPENDICES
A. Selected References 
B. Guidelines for Health Equity
C. Figure 1. How Social Justice Becomes Embodied 
D. Figure 2. Eliminating Health Inequity: The Role of Local Public Health and 
       Community Organizing 
E.   People's Health Movement Charter
                                
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                                  Selling point: A project of the national organization that represents all local health departments in the US
Selling point: Second edition is fully updated and revised
Selling point: With contributions from scholars and practitioners from across the country
                                
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                                  Richard Hofrichter is Senior Analyst, Health Equity for the National Association of County & City Health Officials.
Rajiv Bhatia is Director, Division of Occupational and Environmental Health at the San Francisco Department of Public Health as well as Assistant Clinical Professor of Medicine, University of California at San Francisco
                                
                                Les mer
                              
                                  Selling point: A project of the national organization that represents all local health departments in the US
Selling point: Second edition is fully updated and revised
Selling point: With contributions from scholars and practitioners from across the country
                                
                                Les mer
                              Produktdetaljer
ISBN
                    
            9780195343144
      
                  Publisert
                     2010 
                  Utgave
                     2. utgave 
                  Utgiver
                    Oxford University Press Inc
                  Vekt
                     816 gr
                  Høyde
                     155 mm
                  Bredde
                     231 mm
                  Dybde
                     31 mm
                  Aldersnivå
                     UP, 05
                  Språk
                    
  Product language
              Engelsk
          Format
                    
  Product format
              Heftet
          Antall sider
                     600
                  