
Some Aspects Of Public Health Vary By Locality Or Jurisdiction. Political Challenges Are Not One Of Them. As Governments On Every Scale Become Motivated By Short-term Economic Gains, The Essential Causes Of Public Health And Equity Are Regularly Subject To Political Questioning And Financial Shortcutting. Governing For Health Is A Counterpoint To This Myopic Approach -- A Passionate, Rigorous Case For Why The Health Of A Society Is Both Its Greatest Measure And Its Most Untapped Source Of Prosperity. Drawing On Evidence From Economic Policy, Urban Planning, Education, Environmental Policy, And Civil Action, Fran Baum Offers More Than A Pie-in-sky Vision Of An Equitable Society. Governing For Health Is An Actionable (and Inspiring) Roadmap To A Society That Draws Prosperity From Advancing The Health Of Its People. It Utilizes Methods Of Progress-measuring, City Planning, And Progressive Policy Foci To Advance Goals That Are Unreachable In Traditional, Economics-driven Government Practice. Whether For Students In Health Equity, More Seasoned Public Health Professionals, Or Citizens Interested In Their Community's And Their Own Health This Book Offers A Trenchant, Richly Rewarding And Accessible Look At The Field's Ultimate End Game -- And With It, Hope That It's Closer Than We Think.
This book investigates how political structures and short-term economic priorities undermine public health, arguing that societal prosperity is inextricably linked to the health and equity of its population. Fran Baum, a prominent scholar in public health and health equity, synthesizes decades of research to challenge the prevailing focus on narrow economic metrics. She presents a framework where government policy is reoriented toward the social determinants of health, utilizing evidence from diverse sectors to demonstrate that equitable policy is both feasible and economically beneficial.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and public health professionals recognize this work as a significant contribution to the discourse on social determinants of health. Readers frequently note the clarity of the author's arguments, which bridge the gap between complex policy theory and practical, actionable governance strategies.
Page Count:
224
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190258950
ISBN-13:
9780190258955
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