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In most European countries there is a growing imbalance between the
supply and demand of medical manpower. Though many national gov
ernments, international organizations and scientific institutes,
and also, with a view from a different angle, doctors associations
recognize this problem, it appears to be very difficult to bring
all people concerned with this problem together in order to find a
solution. On this occasion, the initiative to arrange an
international meeting was taken by the junior-doctors associations
of The Netherlands and Sweden with the organizational support of
the Faculty of Medicine of University Limburg, Maastricht, The
Netherlands, and under the auspices of the Permanent Working Group
of European Junior Hospital Doctors. The symposium should be
considered as a step in a series of continuing activities within
the field of health manpower planning. The Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) organized a working
symposium on Long-Range Forecasting and Planning in 1968
(8ellaglio, Italy), followed by the Expert Committee ofthe OECD
which produced the 'New Directives in Education for Changing Health
Care System' (OECD CERI report, Paris 1975). The Dutch ministries
of Education and Sciences and of Health and Environmental
Protection organized a seminar on 'Cooperation of Health Care and
Education at Regional Level, Responsibilities and Cost Alloca tion'
(1978, Noordwijkerhout, The Netherlands). Following this, the Dutch
Association of Junior Hospital Doctors (LVAG) organized a national
con ference 'Today a consultant in training, tomorrow an unemployed
special ist?' (1980, Utrecht, The Netherlands)."
In most European countries there is a growing imbalance between the
supply and demand of medical manpower. Though many national gov
ernments, international organizations and scientific institutes,
and also, with a view from a different angle, doctors associations
recognize this problem, it appears to be very difficult to bring
all people concerned with this problem together in order to find a
solution. On this occasion, the initiative to arrange an
international meeting was taken by the junior-doctors associations
of The Netherlands and Sweden with the organizational support of
the Faculty of Medicine of University Limburg, Maastricht, The
Netherlands, and under the auspices of the Permanent Working Group
of European Junior Hospital Doctors. The symposium should be
considered as a step in a series of continuing activities within
the field of health manpower planning. The Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) organized a working
symposium on Long-Range Forecasting and Planning in 1968
(8ellaglio, Italy), followed by the Expert Committee ofthe OECD
which produced the 'New Directives in Education for Changing Health
Care System' (OECD CERI report, Paris 1975). The Dutch ministries
of Education and Sciences and of Health and Environmental
Protection organized a seminar on 'Cooperation of Health Care and
Education at Regional Level, Responsibilities and Cost Alloca tion'
(1978, Noordwijkerhout, The Netherlands). Following this, the Dutch
Association of Junior Hospital Doctors (LVAG) organized a national
con ference 'Today a consultant in training, tomorrow an unemployed
special ist?' (1980, Utrecht, The Netherlands)."
The second volume of a two-volume reader concerned with the
findings of leading social scientists and medical researchers
around the world. Contributors to this survey of the connections
between social structures and public health, reveal that life
expectancy, illness and other health factors are closely related to
the structure of a given society, and that variations in health
within a population are primarily related to socio-structural
factors, including income inequality, educational differences, lack
of opportunity and racism.
Why do societies experience higher rates of mortality after
economic recession? What accounts for the persistent social class
differences in mortality rates? How do we explain the health status
differences between men and women, blacks and whites, and different
communities or cultures? How do some families create more healthful
environments for their children? How is stress generated in the
workplace? Such fundamental questions about the social determinants
of health are discussed in depth in this wide-ranging and
authoritative book. Well-known contributors from North America and
Europe gather and assess the evidence for the diverse pathways by
which society influences health and provides conceptual frameworks
for understanding these relationships. The book opens with a broad
review of research on the social environment's contribution to
health status and then addresses particular social factors: the
family, the community, culture, class, race and gender, the
economy, and the workplace. The concluding two chapters examine the
contribution of medicine to the improved health of Americans and
recast the health policy debate in a broad social policy context.
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