This data-rich work examines today's most compelling and
controversial public health issues, including alcohol and drug
abuse, AIDS, abortion, black and infant mortality, drug-affected
babies, child abuse, teenage pregnancy, and cigarette smoking.
Hammerle's theme is that individual behavioral choices often have
far-reaching and costly effects. When practiced by large numbers of
people, the human and fiscal costs can be monumental, taxing
virtually all of our social systems as well as our financial
resources. Hammerle enumerates these costs and, employing economic
analytical tools, recommends public policies that will reduce the
incidence of such behavior or otherwise reduce its social cost.
Some recommendations are outside the mainstream, but all are well
substantiated and soundly argued.
This volume will be of great interest to academics,
practitioners, and policy-makers in the fields of public health,
health care administration, public policy, child protection, and
family planning. The work will also interest economists and
sociologists in the field of social welfare, as well as lay persons
who are concerned about these timely public health issues.
General
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