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  2. Health equity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_equity

    Poor health outcomes appear to be an effect of economic inequality across a population. Nations and regions with greater economic inequality show poorer outcomes in life expectancy, [31]: Figure 1.1 mental health, [31]: Figure 5.1 drug abuse, [31]: Figure 5.3 obesity, [31]: Figure 7.1 educational performance, teenage birthrates, and ill health due to violence.

  3. Social inequality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_inequality

    Inequalities in health are often associated with socioeconomic status and access to health care. Health inequities can occur when the distribution of public health services is unequal. For example, in Indonesia in 1990, only 12% of government spending for health was for services consumed by the poorest 20% of households, while the wealthiest 20 ...

  4. Gender disparities in health - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_disparities_in_health

    Equity in health refers to the situation whereby every individual has a fair opportunity to attain their full health potential. [5] Overall, the term "health disparities", or "health inequalities", is widely understood as the differences in health between people who are situated in different positions in a socioeconomic hierarchy. [6]

  5. Reducing poverty and inequality should be ‘urgent public ...

    www.aol.com/reducing-poverty-inequality-urgent...

    Policy-makers should prioritise reducing poverty, deprivation, and economic inequality “as an urgent public health necessity”, it says. It reads: “If the current trajectory of deepening ...

  6. Inequality in disease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inequality_in_disease

    While correlating, health and status have arisen in the U.S. from interrelated forces that may intricately accumulate or negate one another due to specific historical contexts. [15] As this lack of cause and effect simplicity indicates, exactly where disease-related health inequality arises is murky, and multiple factors likely contribute.

  7. Social determinants of health in poverty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_determinants_of...

    The social determinants of health in poverty describe the factors that affect impoverished populations' health and health inequality. Inequalities in health stem from the conditions of people's lives, including living conditions, work environment, age, and other social factors, and how these affect people's ability to respond to illness. [1]

  8. Social determinants of health - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_determinants_of_health

    The materialist approach offers insight into the sources of health inequalities among individuals and nations. Adoption of health-threatening behaviors is also influenced by material deprivation and stress. [80] Environments influence whether individuals take up tobacco, use alcohol, consume poor diets, and have low levels of physical activity.

  9. Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making Us Sick? - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unnatural_Causes:_Is...

    Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making Us Sick? is a four-hour documentary series, broadcast nationally in the United States on PBS in spring 2008, [1] that examines the role of social determinants of health in creating health inequalities/health disparities (which the film considers health inequities) in the US.