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This comprehensive text is unique in its compilation of experiences
in addressing the global diabetes epidemic and description of
diverse worldwide prevention initiatives. Background chapters
describe the diagnosis and definition of diabetes, the
epidemiology, pathophysiology of prediabetes as well as clinical
trial evidence for diabetes prevention and treatment. Furthermore,
the critical role of government in formulating a global health
agenda, policy perspectives for European initiatives, the
importance of nutritional policies for diabetes prevention as well
as the development of the necessary capacity and infrastructure for
diabetes prevention are described. Given the prevalence of diabetes
in South Asians and migrants, one chapter focuses on risk factors
and prevention of diabetes in these communities. Other chapters
detail local and regional approaches covering a truly global span:
United States, Latin America, Europe, India, Turkey, (Siberia)
Russia, the Middle East and North Africa, South Africa, Israel,
East Asia and Australia.Authored by academic experts in
endocrinology and diabetes and global leaders in epidemiology and
public health, this landmark text is an authoritative reference for
a diverse audience including government, public health and policy
experts and researchers, academicians, healthcare professionals,
endocrinologists and clinicians interested in prediabetes and
diabetes prevention, graduate students and faculty in public and
global health graduate programs, epidemiologists, nutritionists,
sociologists and those in translational medicine. Readers will
broaden their awareness of the prevailing and burgeoning diabetes
epidemic and the remarkably creative worldwide prevention
initiatives undertaken to address the seemingly insurmountable
inherent challenges posed by this global health care crisis. The
text is an attestation to the wonderful potential for enormous
human collaboration and achievement when communal organizations,
governments at local, regional and national levels, researchers,
the medical and public health communities, and nutrition experts
join with global citizenry in confronting one of the most
significant healthcare challenges witnessed in this century.
The outbreak of the financial crisis in 2008 has had significant
effects on economic activity, unemployment, and public finances for
all European countries. However, European economies do not form a
homogenous region, and any serious analysis of macroeconomic
imbalances in Europe must account for the fact that different
economic and political models and circumstances operate across the
continent. This book focuses on the Nordic countries (Denmark,
Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden) which have a relatively good
record of undertaking fiscal and structural reforms after their own
financial and debt crises in the 1980s and 1990s. The Nordic
countries are small and open economies, well-known for their high
income levels, high employment rates, organized labour markets, a
relatively equal distribution of incomes, and large public sectors.
From this perspective, the book asks whether there are lessons that
might be learned from the Nordic economies. Is there a distinctive
Nordic model that could be usefully followed, by other small open
economies, in terms of fiscal and monetary policy design, labour
market policies and reforms, and financial and housing market
regulation? It is inappropriate to define the Nordic model in terms
of a common set of policies. Since the key characteristics,
including the overarching objectives and supporting institutions,
have strong historical foundations, copying and pasting them to
other countries is not easily done. Even though the Nordic
experiences are not directly transferable, they may add new
knowledge about the importance of institutional design, fiscal
consolidation, and structural reforms not only for macroeconomic
performance but also for how to preserve key objectives such as
social balance and equity.
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