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Health promotion research : towards a new social epidemiology / edited by Bernhard Badura and Ilona Kickbusch.

Contributor(s): Badura, Bernhard | Kickbusch, Ilona | World Health Organization. Regional Office for EuropeMaterial type: TextTextSeries: WHO regional publications. European series ; no. 37Publication details: Copenhagen : WHO Regional Office for Europe, 1991. Description: 496 pISBN: 9289011289Subject(s): Health policy | Health promotion | Public policy | Social environment | Environment and Public HealthNLM classification: WA 20.5Online resources: Click here to access online Abstract: A collection of twenty-one state-of-the-art reviews illustrating the ways in which research in the social sciences can improve understanding of the social determinants of health and disease and shape policies that promote health. Examples of specific interventions and their results are also provided. The book has five main parts. The first part focuses on strategies for improving public health policy. Articles, which underscore the need for a rigorous interdisciplinary approach to policy decisions, describe various methodological and conceptual approaches that can be used to assess problems, identify risk factors, guide policy choices, and test programmes of health promotion. Of central concern is the need to expand health policy from its traditional concern with illness and curative medicine to include multisectoral policies that create healthy environments and encourage individuals to make healthy choices. Articles in the second part, focused on social and behavioural factors, discuss the links between economic status and disease and consider the extent to which stress, coping styles, social supports, and lifestyle factors will influence individual differences in susceptibility to disease. Papers in the third part explore the ways in which families, workplaces, and hospitals can serve as settings for communicating health messages and promoting healthy practices. Population-oriented health promotion is assessed in the fourth part, which considers how policies should be changed to meet the special needs of women, the unemployed, the elderly, and the chronically ill. Details range from the question of whether paid work is good for women's health to a conceptual model linking aggregate economic change to pathological outcomes. The book concludes with a discussion of the role of community-based action in health promotion, including information on the outcome of various European programmes for the prevention of cardiovascular diseases and on the contribution of voluntary organizations and self-help groups.
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Books Books WHO HQ
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A collection of twenty-one state-of-the-art reviews illustrating the ways in which research in the social sciences can improve understanding of the social determinants of health and disease and shape policies that promote health. Examples of specific interventions and their results are also provided. The book has five main parts. The first part focuses on strategies for improving public health policy. Articles, which underscore the need for a rigorous interdisciplinary approach to policy decisions, describe various methodological and conceptual approaches that can be used to assess problems, identify risk factors, guide policy choices, and test programmes of health promotion. Of central concern is the need to expand health policy from its traditional concern with illness and curative medicine to include multisectoral policies that create healthy environments and encourage individuals to make healthy choices. Articles in the second part, focused on social and behavioural factors, discuss the links between economic status and disease and consider the extent to which stress, coping styles, social supports, and lifestyle factors will influence individual differences in susceptibility to disease. Papers in the third part explore the ways in which families, workplaces, and hospitals can serve as settings for communicating health messages and promoting healthy practices. Population-oriented health promotion is assessed in the fourth part, which considers how policies should be changed to meet the special needs of women, the unemployed, the elderly, and the chronically ill. Details range from the question of whether paid work is good for women's health to a conceptual model linking aggregate economic change to pathological outcomes. The book concludes with a discussion of the role of community-based action in health promotion, including information on the outcome of various European programmes for the prevention of cardiovascular diseases and on the contribution of voluntary organizations and self-help groups.

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