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Health systems everywhere are experiencing rapid change in response
to new threats to health, which include lifestyle diseases, risks
of pandemic flu, and the global effects of climate change. At the
same time, health inequalities continue to widen despite efforts to
halt and reverse them. Such developments have profound implications
for the future direction of public health policy and practice. This
book offers a wide-ranging, provocative, and accessible assessment
of challenges confronting a public health system in the UK,
exploring how its parameters have shifted over time and identifying
the origins of long-standing dilemmas in public health practice.
The book provides an overarching review of the state of public
health system, and it is based on an extensive literature review
and research. It includes historical policy and practice, and it
focuses on key issues facing UK public health services, such as
management, commissioning, workforce development, and public
engagement.
Rated as a top 10 book about the COVID-19 pandemic by New
Statesman:
https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/2021/07/best-books-about-covid-19-pandemic
EPDF and EPUB available Open Access under CC-BY-NC- ND It has been
claimed that we are 'all in it together' and that the COVID-19
virus 'does not discriminate'. This accessible, yet authoritative
book dispels this myth of COVID-19 as an 'equal opportunity'
disease, by showing how the pandemic is a syndemic of disease and
inequality. Drawing on international data and accounts, it argues
that the pandemic is unequal in three ways: it has killed
unequally, been experienced unequally and will impoverish
unequally. These inequalities are a political choice: with
governments effectively choosing who lives and who dies, we need to
learn from COVID-19 quickly to prevent growing inequality and to
reduce health inequalities in the future. COVID-19 is an unequal
pandemic.
Informed by a wealth of available research, between 1997 and 2010,
the UK Labour government introduced a raft of policies to reduce
health inequalities. Despite this, by most measures, the UK's
health inequalities have continued to widen. This failure has
prompted calls for new approaches to health inequalities research
and some consensus that public health researchers ought to be more
actively involved in 'public health advocacy'. Yet there is
currently no agreement as to what these new research agendas should
be and despite multiple commentaries reflecting on recent UK
efforts to reduce health inequalities, there has so far been little
attempt to map future directions for research or to examine what
more egalitarian policies means in practical terms. Health
Inequalities: Critical Perspectives addresses these concerns. It
takes stock of the UK's experiences of health inequalities research
and policy to date, reflecting on the lessons that have been learnt
from these experiences, both within the UK and internationally. The
book identifies emergent research and policy topics, exploring the
perspectives of actors working in a range of professional settings
on these agendas. Finally, the book considers potential ways of
improving the links between health inequalities research, policy
and practice, including via advocacy. With contributions from
established, international health inequalities experts and newer,
up-and-coming researchers in the field, as well as individuals
working on health inequalities in policy, practice and civil
society settings, Health Inequalities: Critical Perspectives is a
'must buy' for researchers, postgraduate students, policymakers,
practitioners, and research funders.
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