Jump to content

Public health

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Public Health Sciences)

Delivery of malaria treatment by community health worker in Djénébougou, Mali. October 2013.
COVID-19 vaccination center, fair grounds Cologne, 1st vaccination
Installing E. 80th Street pipeline, Seattle, Washington, USA, 1931
The Addl. Secretary, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Shri Keshav Desiraju addressing at the launch of the media campaign of National Tobacco Control Programme, in New Delhi on February 02, 2012. The WHO Representative, Dr. Nata Menabde and other dignitaries are also seen.
Various aspects of public health: From top to bottom : Community health worker in Mali, vaccination example (COVID-19 vaccination in Germany), historical sewer installation photo from the United States, anti-smoking campaign in India,


Public health is "the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life and promoting health through the organized efforts and informed choices of society, organizations, public and private, communities and individuals".[1][2] Analyzing the determinants of health of a population and the threats it faces is the basis for public health.[3] The public can be as small as a handful of people or as large as a village or an entire city; in the case of a pandemic it may encompass several continents. The concept of health takes into account physical, psychological, and social well-being, among other factors.[4]

Public health is an interdisciplinary field. For example, epidemiology, biostatistics, social sciences and management of health services are all relevant. Other important sub-fields include environmental health, community health, behavioral health, health economics, public policy, mental health, health education, health politics, occupational safety, disability, oral health, gender issues in health, and sexual and reproductive health.[5] Public health, together with primary care, secondary care, and tertiary care, is part of a country's overall healthcare system. Public health is implemented through the surveillance of cases and health indicators, and through the promotion of healthy behaviors. Common public health initiatives include promotion of hand-washing and breastfeeding, delivery of vaccinations, promoting ventilation and improved air quality both indoors and outdoors, suicide prevention, smoking cessation, obesity education, increasing healthcare accessibility and distribution of condoms to control the spread of sexually transmitted diseases.

There is a significant disparity in access to health care and public health initiatives between developed countries and developing countries, as well as within developing countries. In developing countries, public health infrastructures are still forming. There may not be enough trained healthcare workers, monetary resources, or, in some cases, sufficient knowledge to provide even a basic level of medical care and disease prevention.[6][7] A major public health concern in developing countries is poor maternal and child health, exacerbated by malnutrition and poverty coupled with governments' reluctance in implementing public health policies. Developed nations are at greater risk of certain public health crises, including childhood obesity, although overweight populations in low- and middle-income countries are catching up.[8]

From the beginnings of human civilization, communities promoted health and fought disease at the population level.[9][10] In complex, pre-industrialized societies, interventions designed to reduce health risks could be the initiative of different stakeholders, such as army generals, the clergy or rulers. Great Britain became a leader in the development of public health initiatives, beginning in the 19th century, due to the fact that it was the first modern urban nation worldwide.[11] The public health initiatives that began to emerge initially focused on sanitation (for example, the Liverpool and London sewerage systems), control of infectious diseases (including vaccination and quarantine) and an evolving infrastructure of various sciences, e.g. statistics, microbiology, epidemiology, sciences of engineering.[11]

Definition

[edit]
A community health worker in Korail Basti, a slum in Dhaka, Bangladesh

Public health has been defined as "the science and art of preventing disease", prolonging life and improving quality of life through organized efforts and informed choices of society, organizations (public and private), communities and individuals.[2] The public can be as small as a handful of people or as large as a village or an entire city. The concept of health takes into account physical, psychological, and social well-being. As such, according to the World Health Organization, "health is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity".[4]

[edit]
The WHO is the predominant agency associated with global health.

Public health is related to global health which is the health of populations in the worldwide context.[12] It has been defined as "the area of study, research and practice that places a priority on improving health and achieving equity in "Health for all" people worldwide".[13] International health is a field of health care, usually with a public health emphasis, dealing with health across regional or national boundaries.[14] Public health is not the same as public healthcare (publicly funded health care).

The term preventive medicine is related to public health. The American Board of Preventive Medicine separates three categories of preventive medicine: aerospace health, occupational health, and public health and general preventative medicine. Jung, Boris and Lushniak argue that preventive medicine should be considered the medical specialty for public health but note that the American College of Preventive Medicine and American Board of Preventive Medicine do not prominently use the term "public health".[15]: 1  Preventive medicine specialists are trained as clinicians and address complex health needs of a population such as by assessing the need for disease prevention programs, using the best methods to implement them, and assessing their effectiveness.[15]: 1, 3 

Since the 1990s many scholars in public health have been using the term population health.[16]: 3  There are no medical specialties directly related to population health.[15]: 4  Valles argues that consideration of health equity is a fundamental part of population health. Scholars such as Coggon and Pielke express concerns about bringing general issues of wealth distribution into population health. Pielke worries about "stealth issue advocacy" in population health.[16]: 163  Jung, Boris and Lushniak consider population health to be a concept that is the goal of an activity called public health practiced through the specialty preventive medicine.[15]: 4 

Lifestyle medicine uses individual lifestyle modification to prevent or revert disease and can be considered a component of preventive medicine and public health. It is implemented as part of primary care rather than a specialty in its own right.[15]: 3  Valles argues that the term social medicine has a narrower and more biomedical focus than the term population health.[16]: 7 

Purpose

[edit]

The purpose of a public health intervention is to prevent and mitigate diseases, injuries, and other health conditions. The overall goal is to improve the health of individuals and populations, and to increase life expectancy.[17][18]

Components

[edit]

Public health is a complex term, composed of many elements and different practices. It is a multi-faceted, interdisciplinary field.[11] For example, epidemiology, biostatistics, social sciences and management of health services are all relevant. Other important sub-fields include environmental health, community health, behavioral health, health economics, public policy, mental health, health education, health politics, occupational safety, disability, gender issues in health, and sexual and reproductive health.[5]

Modern public health practice requires multidisciplinary teams of public health workers and professionals. Teams might include epidemiologists, biostatisticians, physician assistants, public health nurses, midwives, medical microbiologists, pharmacists, economists, sociologists, geneticists, data managers, environmental health officers (public health inspectors), bioethicists, gender experts, sexual and reproductive health specialists, physicians, and veterinarians.[19]

The elements and priorities of public health have evolved over time, and are continuing to evolve.[11] Common public health initiatives include promotion of hand-washing and breastfeeding, delivery of vaccinations, suicide prevention, smoking cessation, obesity education, increasing healthcare accessibility and distribution of condoms to control the spread of sexually transmitted diseases.[20]

Methods

[edit]
Newspaper headlines from around the world about polio vaccine tests (13 April 1955)

Public health aims are achieved through surveillance of cases and the promotion of healthy behaviors, communities and environments. Analyzing the determinants of health of a population and the threats it faces is the basis for public health.[3]

Many diseases are preventable through simple, nonmedical methods. For example, research has shown that the simple act of handwashing with soap can prevent the spread of many contagious diseases.[21] In other cases, treating a disease or controlling a pathogen can be vital to preventing its spread to others, either during an outbreak of infectious disease or through contamination of food or water supplies.

Public health, together with primary care, secondary care, and tertiary care, is part of a country's overall health care system. Many interventions of public health interest are delivered outside of health facilities, such as food safety surveillance, distribution of condoms and needle-exchange programs for the prevention of transmissible diseases.

Public health requires Geographic Information Systems (GIS) because risk, vulnerability and exposure involve geographic aspects.[22]

Ethics

[edit]
A Public Health Prayer - Dr Edmond Fernandes
A Public Health Prayer - Dr Edmond Fernandes

A dilemma in public health ethics is dealing with the conflict between individual rights and maximizing right to health.[23]: 28  Public health is justified by consequentialist utilitarian ideas,[23]: 153  but is constrained and critiqued by liberal,[23] deontological, principlist and libertarian philosophies[23]: 99, 95, 74, 123  Stephen Holland argues that it can be easy to find a particular framework to justify any viewpoint on public health issues, but that the correct approach is to find a framework that best describes a situation and see what it implies about public health policy.[23]: 154 

The definition of health is vague and there are many conceptualizations. Public health practitioners definition of health can different markedly from members of the public or clinicians. This can mean that members of the public view the values behind public health interventions as alien which can cause resentment amongst the public towards certain interventions.[23]: 230  Such vagueness can be a problem for health promotion.[23]: 241  Critics have argued that public health tends to place more focus on individual factors associated with health at the expense of factors operating at the population level.[16]: 9 

Historically, public health campaigns have been criticized as a form of "healthism", as moralistic in nature rather than being focused on health. Medical doctors, Petr Shkrabanek and James McCormick wrote a series of publications on this topic in the late 1980s and early 1990s criticizing the UK's the Health of The Nation campaign. These publications exposed abuse of epidemiology and statistics by the public health movement to support lifestyle interventions and screening programs.[24]: 85 [25] A combination of inculcating a fear of ill-health and a strong notion of individual responsibility has been criticized as a form of "health fascism" by a number of scholars, objectifying the individual with no considerations of emotional or social factors.[26]: 8 [25]: 7 [27]: 81 

Priority areas

[edit]

Original focal areas

[edit]
A Somali boy is injected with inactivated poliovirus vaccine (Mogadishu, 1993).

When public health initiatives began to emerge in England in modern times (18th century onwards) there were three core strands of public health which were all related to statecraft: Supply of clean water and sanitation (for example London sewerage system); control of infectious diseases (including vaccination and quarantine); an evolving infrastructure of various sciences, e.g. statistics, microbiology, epidemiology, sciences of engineering.[11] Great Britain was a leader in the development of public health during that time period out of necessity: Great Britain was the first modern urban nation (by 1851 more than half of the population lived in settlements of more than 2000 people).[11] This led to a certain type of distress which then led to public health initiatives.[11] Later that particular concern faded away.

Changing focal areas and expanding scope

[edit]
Cigarette packet warnings as part of anti-smoking campaigns

With the onset of the epidemiological transition and as the prevalence of infectious diseases decreased through the 20th century, public health began to put more focus on chronic diseases such as cancer and heart disease. Previous efforts in many developed countries had already led to dramatic reductions in the infant mortality rate using preventive methods. In Britain, the infant mortality rate fell from over 15% in 1870 to 7% by 1930.[28]

A major public health concern in developing countries is poor maternal and child health, exacerbated by malnutrition and poverty. The WHO reports that a lack of exclusive breastfeeding during the first six months of life contributes to over a million avoidable child deaths each year.[29]

Public health surveillance has led to the identification and prioritization of many public health issues facing the world today, including HIV/AIDS, diabetes, waterborne diseases, zoonotic diseases, and antibiotic resistance leading to the reemergence of infectious diseases such as tuberculosis. Antibiotic resistance, also known as drug resistance, was the theme of World Health Day 2011.

For example, the WHO reports that at least 220 million people worldwide have diabetes. Its incidence is increasing rapidly, and it is projected that the number of diabetes deaths will double by 2030.[30] In a June 2010 editorial in the medical journal The Lancet, the authors opined that "The fact that type 2 diabetes, a largely preventable disorder, has reached epidemic proportion is a public health humiliation."[31] The risk of type 2 diabetes is closely linked with the growing problem of obesity. The WHO's latest estimates as of June 2016 highlighted that globally approximately 1.9 billion adults were overweight in 2014, and 41 million children under the age of five were overweight in 2014.[32] Once considered a problem in high-income countries, it is now on the rise in low-income countries, especially in urban settings.[33]

Many public health programs are increasingly dedicating attention and resources to the issue of obesity, with objectives to address the underlying causes including healthy diet and physical exercise. The National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) has published a review of research on what local authorities can do to tackle obesity.[34] The review covers interventions in the food environment (what people buy and eat), the built and natural environments, schools, and the community, as well as those focussing on active travel, leisure services and public sports, weight management programmes, and system-wide approaches.[34]

Health inequalities, driven by the social determinants of health, are also a growing area of concern in public health. A central challenge to securing health equity is that the same social structures that contribute to health inequities also operate and are reproduced by public health organizations.[35] In other words, public health organizations have evolved to better meet the needs of some groups more than others. The result is often that those most in need of preventative interventions are least likely to receive them[36] and interventions can actually aggravate inequities[37] as they are often inadvertently tailored to the needs of the normative group.[38] Identifying bias within public health research and practice is essential to ensuring public health efforts mitigate and don't aggravate health inequities.

Organizations

[edit]

World Health Organization (WHO)

[edit]

The World Health Organization (WHO) is a specialized agency of the United Nations responsible for international public health.[39] The WHO Constitution, which establishes the agency's governing structure and principles, states its main objective as "the attainment by all peoples of the highest possible level of health".[40] The WHO's broad mandate includes advocating for universal healthcare, monitoring public health risks, coordinating responses to health emergencies, and promoting human health and well-being.[41] The WHO has played a leading role in several public health achievements, most notably the eradication of smallpox, the near-eradication of polio, and the development of an Ebola vaccine. Its current priorities include communicable diseases, particularly HIV/AIDS, Ebola, COVID-19, malaria and tuberculosis; non-communicable diseases such as heart disease and cancer; healthy diet, nutrition, and food security; occupational health; and substance abuse.[42][43]

Others

[edit]

Most countries have their own governmental public health agency, often called the ministry of health, with responsibility for domestic health issues.

For example, in the United States, state and local health departments are on the front line of public health initiatives. In addition to their national duties, the United States Public Health Service (PHS), led by the Surgeon General of the United States Public Health Service, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, headquartered in Atlanta, are also involved with international health activities.[44]

Public health programs

[edit]

Most governments recognize the importance of public health programs in reducing the incidence of disease, disability, and the effects of aging and other physical and mental health conditions. However, public health generally receives significantly less government funding compared with medicine.[45] Although the collaboration of local health and government agencies is considered best practice to improve public health, the pieces of evidence available to support this is limited.[46] Public health programs providing vaccinations have made major progress in promoting health, including substantially reducing the occurrence of cholera and polio and eradicating smallpox, diseases that have plagued humanity for thousands of years.[47]

Three former directors of the Global Smallpox Eradication Program reading the news that smallpox had been globally eradicated, 1980

The World Health Organization (WHO) identifies core functions of public health programs including:[48]

  • providing leadership on matters critical to health and engaging in partnerships where joint action is needed;
  • shaping a research agenda and stimulating the generation, translation and dissemination of valuable knowledge;
  • setting norms and standards and promoting and monitoring their implementation;
  • articulating ethical and evidence-based policy options;
  • monitoring the health situation and assessing health trends.

In particular, public health surveillance programs can:[49]

  • serve as an early warning system for impending public health emergencies;
  • document the impact of an intervention, or track progress towards specified goals; and
  • monitor and clarify the epidemiology of health problems, allow priorities to be set, and inform health policy and strategies.
  • diagnose, investigate, and monitor health problems and health hazards of the community

The "Truth" campaign, launched by the American Legacy Foundation in 2000. This campaign aimed to educate and discourage young people from smoking by exposing the tobacco industry's deceptive practices. Through a combination of powerful visuals, persuasive storytelling, and relatable messaging, the "Truth" campaign successfully reduced smoking rates among teenagers and young adults. [50]

Behavior change

[edit]
The 2010 ISCD study "Drug Harms in the UK: a multi-criteria decision analysis" found that alcohol scored highest overall and in Economic cost, Injury, Family adversities, Environmental damage, and Community harm.

Many health problems are due to maladaptive personal behaviors. From an evolutionary psychology perspective, over consumption of novel substances that are harmful is due to the activation of an evolved reward system for substances such as drugs, tobacco, alcohol, refined salt, fat, and carbohydrates. New technologies such as modern transportation also cause reduced physical activity. Research has found that behavior is more effectively changed by taking evolutionary motivations into consideration instead of only presenting information about health effects. The marketing industry has long known the importance of associating products with high status and attractiveness to others. Films are increasingly being recognized as a public health tool, with the Harvard University's T.H. Chan School of Public Health categorizing such films as "impact filmmaking."[51] In fact, film festivals and competitions have been established to specifically promote films about health.[52] Conversely, it has been argued that emphasizing the harmful and undesirable effects of tobacco smoking on other persons and imposing smoking bans in public places have been particularly effective in reducing tobacco smoking.[53] Public libraries can also be beneficial tools for public health changes. They provide access to healthcare information, link people to healthcare services, and even can provide direct care in certain situations.[54]

Applications in health care

[edit]

As well as seeking to improve population health through the implementation of specific population-level interventions, public health contributes to medical care by identifying and assessing population needs for health care services, including:[55][56][57][58]

  • Assessing current services and evaluating whether they are meeting the objectives of the health care system
  • Ascertaining requirements as expressed by health professionals, the public and other stakeholders
  • Identifying the most appropriate interventions
  • Considering the effect on resources for proposed interventions and assessing their cost-effectiveness
  • Supporting decision making in health care and planning health services including any necessary changes.
  • Informing, educating, and empowering people about health issues

Conflicting aims

[edit]

Some programs and policies associated with public health promotion and prevention can be controversial. One such example is programs focusing on the prevention of HIV transmission through safe sex campaigns and needle-exchange programs. Another is the control of tobacco smoking. Many nations have implemented major initiatives to cut smoking, such as increased taxation and bans on smoking in some or all public places. Supporters argue by presenting evidence that smoking is one of the major killers, and that therefore governments have a duty to reduce the death rate, both through limiting passive (second-hand) smoking and by providing fewer opportunities for people to smoke. Opponents say that this undermines individual freedom and personal responsibility, and worry that the state may be encouraged to remove more and more choice in the name of better population health overall.[59]

Psychological research confirms this tension between concerns about public health and concerns about personal liberty: (i) the best predictor of complying with public health recommendations such as hand-washing, mask-wearing, and staying at home (except for essential activity) during the COVID-19 pandemic was people's perceived duties to prevent harm but (ii) the best predictor of flouting such public health recommendations was valuing liberty more than equality.[60]

Simultaneously, while communicable diseases have historically ranged uppermost as a global health priority, non-communicable diseases and the underlying behavior-related risk factors have been at the bottom. This is changing, however, as illustrated by the United Nations hosting its first General Assembly Special Summit on the issue of non-communicable diseases in September 2011.[61]

Global perspectives

[edit]
A village health worker in Zimbabwe conducting a pediatric examination

Disparities in service and access

[edit]

There is a significant disparity in access to health care and public health initiatives between developed countries and developing countries, as well as within developing countries. In developing countries, public health infrastructures are still forming. There may not be enough trained health workers, monetary resources or, in some cases, sufficient knowledge to provide even a basic level of medical care and disease prevention.[6][7] As a result, a large majority of disease and mortality in developing countries results from and contributes to extreme poverty. For example, many African governments spend less than $100 USD per person per year on health care, while, in the United States, the federal government spent approximately $10,600 USD per capita in 2019.[62] However, expenditures on health care should not be confused with spending on public health. Public health measures may not generally be considered "health care" in the strictest sense. For example, mandating the use of seat belts in cars can save countless lives and contribute to the health of a population, but typically money spent enforcing this rule would not count as money spent on health care.

A malaria test in Kenya. Despite being preventable and curable, malaria is a leading cause of death in many developing nations.[63][64]

Large parts of the world remained plagued by largely preventable or treatable infectious diseases. In addition to this however, many developing countries are also experiencing an epidemiological shift and polarization in which populations are now experiencing more of the effects of chronic diseases as life expectancy increases, the poorer communities being heavily affected by both chronic and infectious diseases.[7] Another major public health concern in the developing world is poor maternal and child health, exacerbated by malnutrition and poverty. The WHO reports that a lack of exclusive breastfeeding during the first six months of life contributes to over a million avoidable child deaths each year.[29] Intermittent preventive therapy aimed at treating and preventing malaria episodes among pregnant women and young children is one public health measure in endemic countries.

Since the 1980s, the growing field of population health has broadened the focus of public health from individual behaviors and risk factors to population-level issues such as inequality, poverty, and education. Modern public health is often concerned with addressing determinants of health across a population. There is a recognition that health is affected by many factors including class, race, income, educational status, region of residence, and social relationships; these are known as "social determinants of health". The upstream drivers such as environment, education, employment, income, food security, housing, social inclusion and many others effect the distribution of health between and within populations and are often shaped by policy.[65] A social gradient in health runs through society. The poorest generally have the worst health, but even the middle classes will generally have worse health outcomes than those of a higher social level.[66] The new public health advocates for population-based policies that improve health in an equitable manner.

The health sector is one of Europe's most labor-intensive industries. In late 2020, it accounted for more than 21 million employment in the European Union when combined with social work.[67] According to the WHO, several countries began the COVID-19 pandemic with insufficient health and care professionals, inappropriate skill mixtures, and unequal geographical distributions. These issues were worsened by the pandemic, reiterating the importance of public health.[68] In the United States, a history of underinvestment in public health undermined the public health workforce and support for population health, long before the pandemic added to stress, mental distress, job dissatisfaction, and accelerated departures among public health workers.[69]

Health aid in developing countries

[edit]
A Cuban doctor performs an open air operation in Guinea-Bissau. Cuba sends more medical personnel to the developing world than all G8 countries combined.[70]

Health aid to developing countries is an important source of public health funding for many developing countries.[71] Health aid to developing countries has shown a significant increase after World War II as concerns over the spread of disease as a result of globalization increased and the HIV/AIDS epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa surfaced.[72][73] From 1990 to 2010, total health aid from developed countries increased from 5.5 billion to 26.87 billion with wealthy countries continuously donating billions of dollars every year with the goal of improving population health.[73] Some efforts, however, receive a significantly larger proportion of funds such as HIV which received an increase in funds of over $6 billion between 2000 and 2010 which was more than twice the increase seen in any other sector during those years.[71] Health aid has seen an expansion through multiple channels including private philanthropy, non-governmental organizations, private foundations such as the Rockefeller Foundation or the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, bilateral donors, and multilateral donors such as the World Bank or UNICEF.[73] The result has been a sharp rise in uncoordinated and fragmented funding of an ever-increasing number of initiatives and projects. To promote better strategic cooperation and coordination between partners, particularly among bilateral development agencies and funding organizations, the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida) spearheaded the establishment of ESSENCE,[74] an initiative to facilitate dialogue between donors/funders, allowing them to identify synergies. ESSENCE brings together a wide range of funding agencies to coordinate funding efforts.

In 2009 health aid from the OECD amounted to $12.47 billion which amounted to 11.4% of its total bilateral aid.[75] In 2009, Multilateral donors were found to spend 15.3% of their total aid on bettering public healthcare.[75]

International health aid debates

[edit]

Debates exist questioning the efficacy of international health aid. Supporters of aid claim that health aid from wealthy countries is necessary in order for developing countries to escape the poverty trap. Opponents of health aid claim that international health aid actually disrupts developing countries' course of development, causes dependence on aid, and in many cases the aid fails to reach its recipients.[71] For example, recently, health aid was funneled towards initiatives such as financing new technologies like antiretroviral medication, insecticide-treated mosquito nets, and new vaccines. The positive impacts of these initiatives can be seen in the eradication of smallpox and polio; however, critics claim that misuse or misplacement of funds may cause many of these efforts to never come into achievement.[71]

Economic modeling based on the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation and the World Health Organization has shown a link between international health aid in developing countries and a reduction in adult mortality rates.[73] However, a 2014–2016 study suggests that a potential confounding variable for this outcome is the possibility that aid was directed at countries once they were already on track for improvement.[71] That same study, however, also suggests that 1 billion dollars in health aid was associated with 364,000 fewer deaths occurring between ages 0 and 5 in 2011.[71]

Sustainable development goals for 2030

[edit]

To address current and future challenges in addressing health issues in the world, the United Nations have developed the Sustainable Development Goals to be completed by 2030.[76] These goals in their entirety encompass the entire spectrum of development across nations, however Goals 1–6 directly address health disparities, primarily in developing countries.[77] These six goals address key issues in global public health, poverty, hunger and food security, health, education, gender equality and women's empowerment, and water and sanitation.[77] Public health officials can use these goals to set their own agenda and plan for smaller scale initiatives for their organizations. These goals are designed to lessen the burden of disease and inequality faced by developing countries and lead to a healthier future. The links between the various sustainable development goals and public health are numerous and well established.[78][79]

History

[edit]

Until the 18th century

[edit]
Mass burials during the second plague pandemic (a.k.a. the Black Death; 1346–1353) intensified urban responses to disaster on the basis of earlier practices. Miniature from "The Chronicles of Gilles Li Muisis" (1272–1352). Bibliothèque royale de Belgique, MS 13076–77, f. 24v.

From the beginnings of human civilization, communities promoted health and fought disease at the population level.[9][10] Definitions of health as well as methods to pursue it differed according to the medical, religious and natural-philosophical ideas groups held, the resources they had, and the changing circumstances in which they lived. Yet few early societies displayed the hygienic stagnation or even apathy often attributed to them.[80][81][82] The latter reputation is mainly based on the absence of present-day bioindicators, especially immunological and statistical tools developed in light of the germ theory of disease transmission.[83][84]

Public health was born neither in Europe nor as a response to the Industrial Revolution. Preventive health interventions are attested almost anywhere historical communities have left their mark. In Southeast Asia, for instance, Ayurvedic medicine and subsequently Buddhism fostered occupational, dietary and sexual regimens that promised balanced bodies, lives and communities, a notion strongly present in Traditional Chinese Medicine as well.[85][86] Among the Mayans, Aztecs and other early civilizations in the Americas, population centers pursued hygienic programs, including by holding medicinal herbal markets.[87] And among Aboriginal Australians, techniques for preserving and protecting water and food sources, micro-zoning to reduce pollution and fire risks, and screens to protect people against flies were common, even in temporary camps.[88][89]

A depiction of Aztec smallpox victims

Western European, Byzantine and Islamicate civilizations, which generally adopted a Hippocratic, Galenic or humoral medical system, fostered preventive programs as well.[90][91][92][93] These were developed on the basis of evaluating the quality of local climates, including topography, wind conditions and exposure to the sun, and the properties and availability of water and food, for both humans and nonhuman animals. Diverse authors of medical, architectural, engineering and military manuals explained how to apply such theories to groups of different origins and under different circumstances.[94][95][96] This was crucial, since under Galenism bodily constitutions were thought to be heavily shaped by their material environments, so their balance required specific regimens as they traveled during different seasons and between climate zones.[97][98][99]

In complex, pre-industrialized societies, interventions designed to reduce health risks could be the initiative of different stakeholders. For instance, in Greek and Roman antiquity, army generals learned to provide for soldiers' wellbeing, including off the battlefield, where most combatants died prior to the twentieth century.[100][101] In Christian monasteries across the Eastern Mediterranean and western Europe since at least the fifth century CE, monks and nuns pursued strict but balanced regimens, including nutritious diets, developed explicitly to extend their lives.[102] And royal, princely and papal courts, which were often mobile as well, likewise adapted their behavior to suit environmental conditions in the sites they occupied. They could also choose sites they considered salubrious for their members and sometimes had them modified.[103]

In cities, residents and rulers developed measures to benefit the general population, which faced a broad array of recognized health risks. These provide some of the most sustained evidence for preventive measures in earlier civilizations. In numerous sites the upkeep of infrastructures, including roads, canals and marketplaces, as well as zoning policies, were introduced explicitly to preserve residents' health.[104] Officials such as the muhtasib in the Middle East and the Road master in Italy, fought the combined threats of pollution through sin, ocular intromission and miasma.[105][106][107][108] Craft guilds were important agents of waste disposal and promoted harm reduction through honesty and labor safety among their members. Medical practitioners, including public physicians,[109] collaborated with urban governments in predicting and preparing for calamities and identifying and isolating people perceived as lepers, a disease with strong moral connotations.[110][111] Neighborhoods were also active in safeguarding local people's health, by monitoring at-risk sites near them and taking appropriate social and legal action against artisanal polluters and neglectful owners of animals. Religious institutions, individuals and charitable organizations in both Islam and Christianity likewise promoted moral and physical wellbeing by endowing urban amenities such as wells, fountains, schools and bridges, also in the service of pilgrims.[112][113] In western Europe and Byzantium, religious processions commonly took place, which purported to act as both preventive and curative measures for the entire community.[114]

Urban residents and other groups also developed preventive measures in response to calamities such as war, famine, floods and widespread disease.[115][116][117][118] During and after the Black Death (1346–53), for instance, inhabitants of the Eastern Mediterranean and Western Europe reacted to massive population decline in part on the basis of existing medical theories and protocols, for instance concerning meat consumption and burial, and in part by developing new ones.[119][120][121] The latter included the establishment of quarantine facilities and health boards, some of which eventually became regular urban (and later national) offices.[122][123] Subsequent measures for protecting cities and their regions included issuing health passports for travelers, deploying guards to create sanitary cordons for protecting local inhabitants, and gathering morbidity and mortality statistics.[124][125][126] Such measures relied in turn on better transportation and communication networks, through which news on human and animal disease was efficiently spread.

After the 18th century

[edit]

With the onset of the Industrial Revolution, living standards amongst the working population began to worsen, with cramped and unsanitary urban conditions. In the first four decades of the 19th century alone, London's population doubled and even greater growth rates were recorded in the new industrial towns, such as Leeds and Manchester. This rapid urbanization exacerbated the spread of disease in the large conurbations that built up around the workhouses and factories. These settlements were cramped and primitive with no organized sanitation. Disease was inevitable and its incubation in these areas was encouraged by the poor lifestyle of the inhabitants. Unavailable housing led to the rapid growth of slums and the per capita death rate began to rise alarmingly, almost doubling in Birmingham and Liverpool. Thomas Malthus warned of the dangers of overpopulation in 1798. His ideas, as well as those of Jeremy Bentham, became very influential in government circles in the early years of the 19th century.[127] The latter part of the century brought the establishment of the basic pattern of improvements in public health over the next two centuries: a social evil was identified, private philanthropists brought attention to it, and changing public opinion led to government action.[127] The 18th century saw rapid growth in voluntary hospitals in England.[128]

The practice of vaccination began in the 1800s, following the pioneering work of Edward Jenner in treating smallpox. James Lind's discovery of the causes of scurvy amongst sailors and its mitigation via the introduction of fruit on lengthy voyages was published in 1754 and led to the adoption of this idea by the Royal Navy.[129] Efforts were also made to promulgate health matters to the broader public; in 1752 the British physician Sir John Pringle published Observations on the Diseases of the Army in Camp and Garrison, in which he advocated for the importance of adequate ventilation in the military barracks and the provision of latrines for the soldiers.[130]

Public health legislation in England

[edit]
Sir Edwin Chadwick was a pivotal influence on the early public health campaign.

The first attempts at sanitary reform and the establishment of public health institutions were made in the 1840s. Thomas Southwood Smith, physician at the London Fever Hospital, began to write papers on the importance of public health, and was one of the first physicians brought in to give evidence before the Poor Law Commission in the 1830s, along with Neil Arnott and James Phillips Kay.[131] Smith advised the government on the importance of quarantine and sanitary improvement for limiting the spread of infectious diseases such as cholera and yellow fever.[132][133]

The Poor Law Commission reported in 1838 that "the expenditures necessary to the adoption and maintenance of measures of prevention would ultimately amount to less than the cost of the disease now constantly engendered". It recommended the implementation of large scale government engineering projects to alleviate the conditions that allowed for the propagation of disease.[127] The Health of Towns Association was formed at Exeter Hall London on 11 December 1844, and vigorously campaigned for the development of public health in the United Kingdom.[134] Its formation followed the 1843 establishment of the Health of Towns Commission, chaired by Sir Edwin Chadwick, which produced a series of reports on poor and insanitary conditions in British cities.[134]

These national and local movements led to the Public Health Act, finally passed in 1848. It aimed to improve the sanitary condition of towns and populous places in England and Wales by placing the supply of water, sewerage, drainage, cleansing and paving under a single local body with the General Board of Health as a central authority. The Act was passed by the Liberal government of Lord John Russell, in response to the urging of Edwin Chadwick. Chadwick's seminal report on The Sanitary Condition of the Labouring Population was published in 1842[135] and was followed up with a supplementary report a year later.[136] During this time, James Newlands (appointed following the passing of the 1846 Liverpool Sanatory Act championed by the Borough of Liverpool Health of Towns Committee) designed the world's first integrated sewerage system, in Liverpool (1848–1869), with Joseph Bazalgette later creating London's sewerage system (1858–1875).

The Vaccination Act 1853 introduced compulsory smallpox vaccination in England and Wales.[137] By 1871 legislation required a comprehensive system of registration run by appointed vaccination officers.[138]

Further interventions were made by a series of subsequent Public Health Acts, notably the 1875 Act. Reforms included the building of sewers, the regular collection of garbage followed by incineration or disposal in a landfill, the provision of clean water and the draining of standing water to prevent the breeding of mosquitoes.

The Infectious Disease (Notification) Act 1889 (52 & 53 Vict. c. 72) mandated the reporting of infectious diseases to the local sanitary authority, which could then pursue measures such as the removal of the patient to hospital and the disinfection of homes and properties.[139]

Public health legislation in other countries

[edit]
Example of historical public health recommendations during the 1918 flu pandemic in New Haven, Connecticut, United States

In the United States, the first public health organization based on a state health department and local boards of health was founded in New York City in 1866.[140]

During The Weimar Republic, Germany faced many public health catastrophes.[141] The Nazi Party had a goal of modernizing health care with Volksgesundheit, German for people's public health; this modernization was based on the growing field of eugenics and measures prioritizing group health over any care for the health of individuals.[142] The end of World War 2 led to the Nuremberg Code, a set of research ethics concerning human experimentation.[143]

Epidemiology

[edit]
Early epidemiologist John Snow mapped clusters of cholera cases in London.

The science of epidemiology was founded by John Snow's identification of a polluted public water well as the source of an 1854 cholera outbreak in London. Snow believed in the germ theory of disease as opposed to the prevailing miasma theory. By talking to local residents (with the help of Reverend Henry Whitehead), he identified the source of the outbreak as the public water pump on Broad Street (now Broadwick Street). Although Snow's chemical and microscope examination of a water sample from the Broad Street pump did not conclusively prove its danger, his studies of the pattern of the disease were convincing enough to persuade the local council to close the well pump by removing its handle.[144]

Snow later used a dot map to illustrate the cluster of cholera cases around the pump. He also used statistics to illustrate the connection between the quality of the water source and cholera cases. He showed that the Southwark and Vauxhall Waterworks Company was taking water from sewage-polluted sections of the Thames and delivering the water to homes, leading to an increased incidence of cholera. Snow's study was a major event in the history of public health and geography. It is regarded as the founding event of the science of epidemiology.[145][146]

Control of infectious diseases

[edit]
Paul-Louis Simond injecting a plague vaccine in Karachi, 1898

With the pioneering work in bacteriology of French chemist Louis Pasteur and German scientist Robert Koch, methods for isolating the bacteria responsible for a given disease and vaccines for remedy were developed at the turn of the 20th century. British physician Ronald Ross identified the mosquito as the carrier of malaria and laid the foundations for combating the disease.[147] Joseph Lister revolutionized surgery by the introduction of antiseptic surgery to eliminate infection. French epidemiologist Paul-Louis Simond proved that plague was carried by fleas on the back of rats,[148] and Cuban scientist Carlos J. Finlay and U.S. Americans Walter Reed and James Carroll demonstrated that mosquitoes carry the virus responsible for yellow fever.[149]: 481 [150] Brazilian scientist Carlos Chagas identified a tropical disease and its vector.[149]: 481 

Society and culture

[edit]

Education and training

[edit]

Education and training of public health professionals is available throughout the world in Schools of Public Health, Medical Schools, Veterinary Schools, Schools of Nursing, and Schools of Public Affairs. The training typically requires a university degree with a focus on core disciplines of biostatistics, epidemiology, health services administration, health policy, health education, behavioral science, gender issues, sexual and reproductive health, public health nutrition, and occupational and environmental health.[151][152]

In the global context, the field of public health education has evolved enormously in recent decades, supported by institutions such as the World Health Organization and the World Bank, among others. Operational structures are formulated by strategic principles, with educational and career pathways guided by competency frameworks, all requiring modulation according to local, national and global realities. Moreover, integrating technology or digital platforms to connect to low health literacy LHL groups could be a way to increase health literacy. [153]It is critically important for the health of populations that nations assess their public health human resource needs and develop their ability to deliver this capacity, and not depend on other countries to supply it.[154]

Schools of public health: a US perspective

[edit]

In the United States, the Welch-Rose Report of 1915[155] has been viewed as the basis for the critical movement in the history of the institutional schism between public health and medicine because it led to the establishment of schools of public health supported by the Rockefeller Foundation.[156] The report was authored by William Welch, founding dean of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, and Wickliffe Rose of the Rockefeller Foundation. The report focused more on research than practical education.[156][157] Some have blamed the Rockefeller Foundation's 1916 decision to support the establishment of schools of public health for creating the schism between public health and medicine and legitimizing the rift between medicine's laboratory investigation of the mechanisms of disease and public health's nonclinical concern with environmental and social influences on health and wellness.[156][158]

Even though schools of public health had already been established in Canada, Europe and North Africa, the United States had still maintained the traditional system of housing faculties of public health within their medical institutions. A $25,000 donation from businessman Samuel Zemurray instituted the School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine at Tulane University in 1912 conferring its first doctor of public health degree in 1914.[159][160] The Yale School of Public Health was founded by Charles-Edward Amory Winslow in 1915.[161] The Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health was founded in 1916 and became an independent, degree-granting institution for research and training in public health, and the largest public health training facility in the United States.[162][163][164] By 1922, schools of public health were established at Columbia and Harvard on the Hopkins model. By 1999 there were twenty nine schools of public health in the US, enrolling around fifteen thousand students.[151][156]

Over the years, the types of students and training provided have also changed. In the beginning, students who enrolled in public health schools typically had already obtained a medical degree; public health school training was largely a second degree for medical professionals. However, in 1978, 69% of American students enrolled in public health schools had only a bachelor's degree.[151]

Degrees in public health

[edit]
The London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine is the oldest school of public health in the Anglosphere.[165]

Schools of public health offer a variety of degrees generally fall into two categories: professional or academic.[166] The two major postgraduate degrees are the Master of Public Health (MPH) or the Master of Science in Public Health (MSPH). Doctoral studies in this field include Doctor of Public Health (DrPH) and Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in a subspecialty of greater Public Health disciplines. DrPH is regarded as a professional degree and PhD as more of an academic degree.

Professional degrees are oriented towards practice in public health settings. The Master of Public Health, Doctor of Public Health, Doctor of Health Science (DHSc/DHS) and the Master of Health Care Administration are examples of degrees which are geared towards people who want careers as practitioners of public health in health departments, managed care and community-based organizations, hospitals and consulting firms, among others. Master of Public Health degrees broadly fall into two categories, those that put more emphasis on an understanding of epidemiology and statistics as the scientific basis of public health practice and those that include a more wide range of methodologies. A Master of Science of Public Health is similar to an MPH but is considered an academic degree (as opposed to a professional degree) and places more emphasis on scientific methods and research. The same distinction can be made between the DrPH and the DHSc: The DrPH is considered a professional degree and the DHSc is an academic degree.[167][168][169]

Academic degrees are more oriented towards those with interests in the scientific basis of public health and preventive medicine who wish to pursue careers in research, university teaching in graduate programs, policy analysis and development, and other high-level public health positions. Examples of academic degrees are the Master of Science, Doctor of Philosophy, Doctor of Science (ScD), and Doctor of Health Science (DHSc). The doctoral programs are distinct from the MPH and other professional programs by the addition of advanced coursework and the nature and scope of a dissertation research project.

Notable people

[edit]

Country examples

[edit]

Canada

[edit]

In Canada, the Public Health Agency of Canada is the national agency responsible for public health, emergency preparedness and response, and infectious and chronic disease control and prevention.[182]

Cuba

[edit]

Since the 1959 Cuban Revolution, the Cuban government has devoted extensive resources to the improvement of health conditions for its entire population via universal access to health care. Infant mortality has plummeted.[149]: 483  Cuban medical internationalism as a policy has seen the Cuban government sent doctors as a form of aid and export to countries in need in Latin America, especially Venezuela, as well as Oceania and Africa countries.

Colombia and Bolivia

[edit]

Public health was important elsewhere in Latin America in consolidating state power and integrating marginalized populations into the nation-state. In Colombia, public health was a means for creating and implementing ideas of citizenship.[183] In Bolivia, a similar push came after their 1952 revolution.[184]

Ghana

[edit]
Ghanaian children receive insecticide-treated bed nets to prevent exposure to malaria transmitting mosquitos.

Though curable and preventive, malaria remains a major public health issue and is the third leading cause of death in Ghana.[185] In the absence of a vaccine, mosquito control, or access to anti-malaria medication, public health methods become the main strategy for reducing the prevalence and severity of malaria.[186] These methods include reducing breeding sites, screening doors and windows, insecticide sprays, prompt treatment following infection, and usage of insecticide treated mosquito nets.[186] Distribution and sale of insecticide-treated mosquito nets is a common, cost-effective anti-malaria public health intervention; however, barriers to use exist including cost, household and family organization, access to resources, and social and behavioral determinants which have not only been shown to affect malaria prevalence rates but also mosquito net use.[187][186]

France

[edit]
The French Third Republic followed well behind Bismarckian Germany, as well as Great Britain, in developing the welfare state including public health. Tuberculosis was the most dreaded disease of the day, especially striking young people in their 20s. Germany set up vigorous measures of public hygiene and public sanatoria, but France let private physicians handle the problem, which left it with a much higher death rate.[188] The French medical profession jealously guarded its prerogatives, and public health activists were not as well organized or as influential as in Germany, Britain or the United States.[189][190] For example, there was a long battle over a public health law which began in the 1880s as a campaign to reorganize the nation's health services, to require the registration of infectious diseases, to mandate quarantines, and to improve the deficient health and housing legislation of 1850. However the reformers met opposition from bureaucrats, politicians, and physicians. Because it was so threatening to so many interests, the proposal was debated and postponed for 20 years before becoming law in 1902. Success finally came when the government realized that contagious diseases had a national security impact in weakening military recruits, and keeping the population growth rate well below Germany's.[191]

Mexico

[edit]

Public health issues were important for the Spanish Empire during the colonial era. Epidemic disease was the main factor in the decline of indigenous populations in the era immediately following the sixteenth-century conquest era and was a problem during the colonial era. The Spanish crown took steps in eighteenth-century Mexico to bring in regulations to make populations healthier.[192] In the late nineteenth century, Mexico was in the process of modernization, and public health issues were again tackled from a scientific point of view.[193][194][195] As in the U.S., food safety became a public health issue, particularly focusing on meat slaughterhouses and meatpacking.[196]

Even during the Mexican Revolution (1910–20), public health was an important concern, with a text on hygiene published in 1916.[197] During the Mexican Revolution, feminist and trained nurse Elena Arizmendi Mejia founded the Neutral White Cross, treating wounded soldiers no matter for what faction they fought. In the post-revolutionary period after 1920, improved public health was a revolutionary goal of the Mexican government.[198][199] The Mexican state promoted the health of the Mexican population, with most resources going to cities.[200][201]

United States

[edit]
Logo of the United States
Public Health Service

The United States Public Health Service (USPHS or PHS) is a collection of agencies of the Department of Health and Human Services concerned with public health, containing nine out of the department's twelve operating divisions. The Assistant Secretary for Health oversees the PHS. The Public Health Service Commissioned Corps (PHSCC) is the federal uniformed service of the PHS, and is one of the eight uniformed services of the United States.

PHS had its origins in the system of marine hospitals that originated in 1798. In 1871 these were consolidated into the Marine Hospital Service, and shortly afterwards the position of Surgeon General and the PHSCC were established. As the system's scope grew to include quarantine authority and research, it was renamed the Public Health Service in 1912.

The United States lacks a coherent system for the governmental funding of public health, relying on a variety of agencies and programs at the federal, state and local levels.[202] Between 1960 and 2001, public health spending in the United States tended to grow, based on increasing expenditures by state and local government, which made up 80–90% of total public health spending. Spending in support of public health in the United States peaked in 2002 and declined in the following decade.[203] State cuts to public health funding during the Great Recession of 2007–2008 were not restored in subsequent years.[204] As of 2012, a panel for the U.S. Institute of Medicine panel warned that the United States spends disproportionately far more on clinical care than it does on public health, neglecting "population-based activities that offer efficient and effective approaches to improving the nation's health."[205][203] As of 2018, about 3% of government health spending was directed to public health and prevention.[47][206][207] This situation has been described as an "uneven patchwork"[208] and "chronic underfunding".[209][210][211][212] The COVID-19 pandemic has been seen as drawing attention to problems in the public health system in the United States and to a lack of understanding of public health and its important role as a common good.[47]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Gatseva PD, Argirova M (June 2011). "Public health: the science of promoting health". Journal of Public Health. 19 (3): 205–206. doi:10.1007/s10389-011-0412-8. ISSN 1613-2238. S2CID 1126351.
  2. ^ a b Winslow CE (January 1920). "The untilled fields of public health". Science. 51 (1306): 23–33. Bibcode:1920Sci....51...23W. doi:10.1126/science.51.1306.23. PMID 17838891.
  3. ^ a b "What is Public Health". Centers for Disease Control Foundation. Atlanta, GA: Centers for Disease Control. Retrieved 27 January 2017.
  4. ^ a b What is the WHO definition of health? from the Preamble to the Constitution of WHO as adopted by the International Health Conference, New York, 19 June – 22 July 1946; signed on 22 July 1946 by the representatives of 61 States (Official Records of WHO, no. 2, p. 100) and entered into force on 7 April 1948. The definition has not been amended since 1948.
  5. ^ a b Perdiguero E (1 July 2001). "Anthropology in public health. Bridging differences in culture and society". Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health. 55 (7): 528b–528. doi:10.1136/jech.55.7.528b. ISSN 0143-005X. PMC 1731924.
  6. ^ a b Chen LC, Evans D, Evans T, Sadana R, Stilwell B, Travis P, et al. (2006). World Health Report 2006: working together for health. Geneva: WHO. OCLC 71199185.
  7. ^ a b c Jamison DT, Mosley WH (January 1991). "Disease control priorities in developing countries: health policy responses to epidemiological change". American Journal of Public Health. 81 (1): 15–22. doi:10.2105/ajph.81.1.15. PMC 1404931. PMID 1983911.
  8. ^ "Obesity catches up with low- and middle-income countries". 25 July 2023. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  9. ^ a b Rosen G (2015). A history of public health (Revised expanded). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-1-4214-1601-4. OCLC 878915301.
  10. ^ a b Porter D (1999). Health, Civilization and the State: A History of Public Health from Ancient to Modern Times. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415200363.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Crook T (2016). Governing systems: modernity and the making of public health in England, 1830–1910. Oakland, California: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-96454-9. OCLC 930786561.
  12. ^ Brown TM, Cueto M, Fee E (January 2006). "The World Health Organization and the transition from "international" to "global" public health". American Journal of Public Health. 96 (1): 62–72. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2004.050831. PMC 1470434. PMID 16322464.
  13. ^ Koplan JP, Bond TC, Merson MH, Reddy KS, Rodriguez MH, Sewankambo NK, et al. (June 2009). "Towards a common definition of global health". Lancet. 373 (9679): 1993–1995. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.610.7968. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(09)60332-9. PMC 9905260. PMID 19493564. S2CID 6919716.
  14. ^ "International Health | Johns Hopkins | Bloomberg School of Public Health". publichealth.jhu.edu. 30 July 2024. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  15. ^ a b c d e Jung P, Lushniak BD (March 2017). "Preventive Medicine's Identity Crisis". American Journal of Preventive Medicine. 52 (3): e85–e89. doi:10.1016/j.amepre.2016.10.037. PMID 28012813.
  16. ^ a b c d Valles SA (2018). Philosophy of population health : philosophy for a new public health era. London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. ISBN 978-1-351-67078-4. OCLC 1035763221.
  17. ^ Smith PG, Morrow RH, Ross DA (1 June 2015), "Types of intervention and their development", Field Trials of Health Interventions: A Toolbox. 3rd edition, OUP Oxford, retrieved 21 August 2024
  18. ^ "A Look At Public Health Interventions". Kent. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  19. ^ Joint Task Group on Public Health Human Resources, Advisory Committee on Health Delivery & Human Resources, Advisory Committee on Population Health & Health Security (2005). Building the public health workforce for the 21st century. Ottawa: Public Health Agency of Canada. OCLC 144167975.
  20. ^ CDC (12 June 2024). "National Health Initiatives, Strategies & Action Plans". Public Health Professionals Gateway. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  21. ^ Global Public-Private Partnership for Handwashing with Soap. Handwashing research Archived 16 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 19 April 2011.
  22. ^ Wang F (2 January 2020). "Why Public Health Needs GIS: A Methodological Overview". Annals of GIS. 26 (1): 1–12. Bibcode:2020AnGIS..26....1W. doi:10.1080/19475683.2019.1702099. PMC 7297184. PMID 32547679.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g Holland S (2015). Public health ethics (Second ed.). Cambridge: Polity Press. ISBN 978-0-7456-6218-3. OCLC 871536632.
  24. ^ Fitzpatrick M (4 January 2002). The Tyranny of Health: Doctors and the Regulation of Lifestyle. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-56346-3.
  25. ^ a b Sim F, McKee M (1 September 2011). Issues In Public Health. McGraw-Hill Education (UK). ISBN 978-0-335-24422-5.
  26. ^ Fitzpatrick K, Tinning R (5 February 2014). Health Education: Critical perspectives. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-07214-8.
  27. ^ Zembylas M (6 May 2021). Affect and the Rise of Right-Wing Populism: Pedagogies for the Renewal of Democratic Education. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-83840-5.
  28. ^ Newell AT, Gazeley I (2012). The Declines in Infant Mortality and Fertility: Evidence from British Cities in Demographic Transition. IZA Discussion Paper No. 6855 (Report). doi:10.2139/ssrn.2157997. hdl:10419/67297. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
  29. ^ a b "10 facts on breastfeeding". World Health Organization. Retrieved 20 April 2011.
  30. ^ World Health Organization. Diabetes Fact Sheet N°312, January 2011. Accessed 19 April 2011.
  31. ^ The Lancet (June 2010). "Type 2 diabetes--time to change our approach". Lancet. 375 (9733): 2193. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(10)61011-2. PMID 20609952. S2CID 31166680.
  32. ^ World Health Organization. Obesity and overweight Fact sheet N°311, Updated June 2016. Accessed 19 April 2011.
  33. ^ "Obesity and overweight". www.who.int. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  34. ^ a b "How can local authorities reduce obesity? Insights from NIHR research". NIHR Evidence. 19 May 2022.
  35. ^ Flynn MA (November 2018). "Im/migration, Work, and Health: Anthropology and the Occupational Health of Labor Im/migrants". Anthropology of Work Review. 39 (2): 116–123. doi:10.1111/awr.12151. PMC 6503519. PMID 31080311.
  36. ^ Victora CG, Vaughan JP, Barros FC, Silva AC, Tomasi E (September 2000). "Explaining trends in inequities: evidence from Brazilian child health studies". Lancet. 356 (9235): 1093–1098. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(00)02741-0. PMID 11009159. S2CID 32450895.
  37. ^ "Coaccess". apps.crossref.org. doi:10.51952/9781847423221.ch005. Retrieved 6 June 2023.
  38. ^ Flynn MA, Check P, Steege AL, Sivén JM, Syron LN (December 2021). "Health Equity and a Paradigm Shift in Occupational Safety and Health". International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 19 (1): 349. doi:10.3390/ijerph19010349. PMC 8744812. PMID 35010608.
  39. ^ "The U.S. Government and the World Health Organization". The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. 24 January 2019. Archived from the original on 18 March 2020. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  40. ^ "WHO Constitution, Basic Documents, Forty-ninth edition" (PDF). WHO. 2020. Archived (PDF) from the original on 1 April 2020.
  41. ^ "What we do". World Health Organization. Archived from the original on 17 March 2020. Retrieved 17 March 2020.
  42. ^ "Core priorities". www.who.int. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  43. ^ Magazine HP, Ghebreyesus TA (5 April 2023). "75 years of WHO: Tedros' 5 priorities for a healthier world". Harvard Public Health Magazine. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  44. ^ Alkhuli MA. English for Nursing and Medicine. دار الفلاح للنشر والتوزيع. ISBN 978-9957-552-36-7.
  45. ^ "Public health principles and neurological disorders". Neurological Disorders: Public Health Challenges (Report). Geneva: World Health Organization. 2006.
  46. ^ Hayes SL, Mann MK, Morgan FM, Kelly MJ, Weightman AL (October 2012). "Collaboration between local health and local government agencies for health improvement". The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2012 (10): CD007825. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD007825.pub6. PMC 9936257. PMID 23076937.
  47. ^ a b c Butcher L (17 November 2020). "Pandemic puts all eyes on public health". Knowable Magazine. doi:10.1146/knowable-111720-1. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
  48. ^ World Health Organization. The role of WHO in public health, accessed 19 April 2011.
  49. ^ World Health Organization. Public health surveillance, accessed 19 April 2011.
  50. ^ https://placebased.media/blog/public-health-advertising
  51. ^ "Impact Filmmaking As A Tool For Public Health Change". Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. 30 August 2023. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  52. ^ Botchway S, Hoang U (January 2016). "Reflections on the United Kingdom's first public health film festival". Perspectives in Public Health. 136 (1): 23–24. doi:10.1177/1757913915619120. PMID 26702114. S2CID 21969020.
  53. ^ Curtis V, Aunger R (November 2011). "Motivational mismatch: Evolved motives as the source of–and solution to–global public health problems. Applied evolutionary psychology". In Roberts SC (ed.). Applied Evolutionary Psychology. Oxford University Press. pp. 259–275. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199586073.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-958607-3.
  54. ^ Philbin MM, Parker CM, Flaherty MG, Hirsch JS (February 2019). "Public Libraries: A Community-Level Resource to Advance Population Health". Journal of Community Health. 44 (1): 192–199. doi:10.1007/s10900-018-0547-4. PMC 6329675. PMID 29995303.
  55. ^ Gillam S, Yates J, Badrinath P, eds. (2007). Essential Public Health: theory and practice. Cambridge University Press. OCLC 144228591.
  56. ^ Pencheon D, Melzer D, Gray M, Guest C, eds. (2006). Oxford Handbook of Public Health Practice. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-158541-8. OCLC 663666786.
  57. ^ Smith S, Sinclair D, Raine R, Reeves B (2005). Health Care Evaluation. Understanding Public Health. Open University Press. OCLC 228171855.
  58. ^ Sanderson CJ, Gruen, Reinhold R (2006). Analytical Models for Decision Making. Understanding Public Health. Open University Press. OCLC 182531015.
  59. ^ updated TW (10 June 2022). "The pros and cons of a total smoking ban". theweek. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  60. ^ Byrd N, Białek M (July 2021). "Your health vs. my liberty: Philosophical beliefs dominated reflection and identifiable victim effects when predicting public health recommendation compliance during the COVID-19 pandemic". Cognition. 212: 104649. doi:10.1016/j.cognition.2021.104649. PMC 8599940. PMID 33756152.
  61. ^ United Nations. Press Conference on General Assembly Decision to Convene Summit in September 2011 on Non-Communicable Diseases. New York, 13 May 2010.
  62. ^ "World Bank Open Data". World Bank Open Data. Retrieved 18 May 2024.
  63. ^ "Malaria – Malaria Worldwide – Impact of Malaria". CDC. 26 January 2021. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  64. ^ "Fact sheet about Malaria". World Health Organization. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  65. ^ Equity, Social Determinants and Public Health Programmes. World Health Organization. 2010. ISBN 9789241563970.
  66. ^ Wilkinson RG, Marmot MG, eds. (2003). The Solid Facts: Social Determinants of Health. WHO. OCLC 54966941.
  67. ^ "Health and social care employees in Europe in 2021". Statista. Retrieved 18 May 2024.
  68. ^ European Investment Bank (2 February 2023). "Health Overview 2023". European Investment Bank.
  69. ^ Leider JP, Yeager VA, Kirkland C, Krasna H, Hare Bork R, Resnick B (April 2023). "The State of the US Public Health Workforce: Ongoing Challenges and Future Directions". Annual Review of Public Health. 44 (1): 323–341. doi:10.1146/annurev-publhealth-071421-032830. PMID 36692395. S2CID 256192725.
  70. ^ Huish R, Kirk JM (2007). "Cuban Medical Internationalism and the Development of the Latin American School of Medicine". Latin American Perspectives. 34 (6): 77–92. doi:10.1177/0094582X07308119.
  71. ^ a b c d e f Bendavid E, Bhattacharya J (June 2014). "The relationship of health aid to population health improvements". JAMA Internal Medicine. 174 (6): 881–887. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2014.292. PMC 4777302. PMID 24756557.
  72. ^ Twumasi PA (April 1981). "Colonialism and international health: a study in social change in Ghana". Social Science & Medicine. Medical Anthropology. 15B (2): 147–151. doi:10.1016/0160-7987(81)90037-5. PMID 7244686.
  73. ^ a b c d Afridi MA, Ventelou B (1 March 2013). "Impact of health aid in developing countries: The public vs. the private channels". Economic Modelling. 31: 759–765. doi:10.1016/j.econmod.2013.01.009. ISSN 0264-9993.
  74. ^ "ESSENCE on Health Research". Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases. World Health Organization. Archived from the original on 3 December 2016.
  75. ^ a b Shwank O. "Global Health Initiatives and Aid Effectiveness in the Health Sector" (PDF). UN.
  76. ^ "2015 – United Nations sustainable development agenda". United Nations Sustainable Development. Archived from the original on 27 November 2015. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
  77. ^ a b "Sustainable development goals". United Nations Sustainable Development. Archived from the original on 26 November 2015. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
  78. ^ "Health". United Nations Sustainable Development. Archived from the original on 2 December 2015. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
  79. ^ "World Development Report". Open Knowledge Repository. Archived from the original on 13 January 2016. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
  80. ^ Cosmacini G (2005). Storia della medicina e della sanità in Italia: dalla peste nera ai giorni nostri. Bari: Laterza.
  81. ^ Shephard RJ (2015). An illustrated history of health and fitness, from pre-history to our post-modern world. Cham: Springer. ISBN 978-3-319-11671-6. OCLC 897376985.
  82. ^ Berridge V (2016). Public Health: A Very Short Introduction (First ed.). Oxford, United Kingdom ; New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-968846-3.
  83. ^ "Public Health During the Industrial Revolution Facts, Worksheets & Issues". School History. 25 May 2020. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  84. ^ "National Center for Biotechnology Information", Science, Medicine, and Animals, National Academies Press (US), 2004, retrieved 21 August 2024
  85. ^ Chattopadhyay A (1968). "Hygienic Principles in the Regulations of Food Habits in the Dharma Sūtras". Nagarjun. 11: 194–99.
  86. ^ Leung AK (2001). "Hygiène et santé publique dans la Chine pré-moderne" [Hygiene and public health in pre-modern China]. In Bourdelais P (ed.). Les hygienists. Enjeux, modèles et practiques [The hygienists. Issues, models and practices] (in French). Paris: Belin. pp. 343–371.
  87. ^ Harvey HR (March 1981). "Public health in Aztec society". Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine. 57 (2): 157–165. PMC 1805201. PMID 7011458.
  88. ^ Memmott P (September 2008). Gunyah, Goondie + Wurley: the Aboriginal architecture of Australia. University of Queensland Press. ISBN 978-0-7022-3245-9.
  89. ^ Gammage B (2014). Biggest Estate on Earth: How Aborigines made Australia. Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-74269-352-1. OCLC 956710111.
  90. ^ Stearns JK (2011). Infectious ideas: contagion in premodern Islamic and Christian thought in the Western Mediterranean. Johns Hopkins Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-9873-0. OCLC 729944227.
  91. ^ Rawcliffe C (2019). Urban Bodies - Communal Health in Late Medieval English Towns and Cities. Boydell & Brewer, Limited. ISBN 978-1-78327-381-2. OCLC 1121393294.
  92. ^ Geltner G (2019). Roads to Health: Infrastructure and Urban Wellbeing in Later Medieval Italy. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-5135-7. OCLC 1076422219.
  93. ^ Varlik M (22 July 2015). Plague and Empire in the Early Modern Mediterranean World. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/cbo9781139004046. ISBN 978-1-139-00404-6. S2CID 197967256.
  94. ^ McVaugh MR (1992). "Arnald of Villanova's Regimen Almarie (Regimen Castra Sequentium) and Medieval Military Medicine". Viator. 23: 201–214. doi:10.1484/J.VIATOR.2.301280.
  95. ^ Nicoud M (2013). Les régimes de santé au Moyen Âge Naissance et diffusion d'une écriture médicale en Italie et en France (XIIIe- XVe siècle). Publications de l'École française de Rome. ISBN 978-2-7283-1006-7. OCLC 960812022.
  96. ^ Ibn Riḍwān 'A (1984) [11th century]. Gamal AS (ed.). Medieval Islamic medicine: Ibn Riḍwān's treatise "On the prevention of bodily ills in Egypt. Translated by Dols MW. University of California Press. OCLC 469624320.
  97. ^ Rather LJ (1968). The Six Things Non-Natural: A Note on the Origins and Fate of a Doctrine and a Phrase. Clio Medica. Vol. 3. pp. 337–347.
  98. ^ García-Ballester L (1993). Kollesch J, Nickel D (eds.). On the Origins of the Six Non-Natural Things in Galen. Galen und das hellenistische Erbe: Verhandlungen des IV. Internationalen Galen-Symposiums veranstaltet vom Institut für Geschichte der Medizin am Bereich Medizin (Charité) der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin 18.-20. September 1989. Stuttgart.
  99. ^ Geltner G, Coomans J (2013). "On the Street and in the Bath-House: Medieval Galenism in Action?=". Anuario de Estudios Medievales. 43: 53–82.
  100. ^ Israelovich I (2016). "Medical Care in the Roman Army during the High Empire". In Harris MV (ed.). Popular Medicine in Graeco-Roman Antiquity: Explorations. Leiden: Brill. pp. 126–146.
  101. ^ Geltner G (January 2019). "In the Camp and on the March: Military Manuals as Sources for Studying Premodern Public Health". Medical History. 63 (1): 44–60. doi:10.1017/mdh.2018.62. PMC 8670759. PMID 30556517.
  102. ^ Harvey BF (2002). Living and dying in England, 1100–1540: the monastic experience. Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-820431-0. OCLC 612358999.
  103. ^ Bagliani AP (1988). "La Mobilità della Curia romana nel Secolo XIII: Riflessi locali" [The Mobility of the Roman Curia in the 13th Century: Local Reflections]. Società e Istituzioni dell'Italia comunale: l'Esempio di Perugia (Secoli XII-XIV) [Society and Institutions of Municipal Italy: the Example of Perugia (12th-14th Centuries)]. Quaderni Storici (in Italian). Vol. 1–2. Perugia: Società editrice Il Mulino S.p.A. pp. 313–316. JSTOR 43777964.
  104. ^ Coomans J (February 2019). "The king of dirt: public health and sanitation in late medieval Ghent". Urban History. 46 (1): 82–105. doi:10.1017/S096392681800024X. ISSN 0963-9268.
  105. ^ Glick TF (1992). "New Perspectives on the Hisba and its Hispanic Derivatives". Al-Qantara. 13 (2): 475–489.
  106. ^ Kinzelbach A (July 2006). "Infection, contagion, and public health in late medieval and early modern German imperial towns". Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences. 61 (3): 369–89. doi:10.1093/jhmas/jrj046. PMID 16540700.
  107. ^ Jørgensen D (July 2008). "Cooperative sanitation: Managing streets and gutters in late Medieval England and Scandinavia". Technology and Culture. 49 (3): 547–567. doi:10.1353/tech.0.0047. PMID 18831288.
  108. ^ Henderson J (2010). "Public Health, Pollution and the Problem of Waste Disposal in Early Modern Tuscany". In Cavaciocchi S (ed.). Le interazioni fra economia e ambiente biologico nell'Europa preindustriale. Secc. XIII-XVIII. Florence: Firenze University Press. pp. 373–382.
  109. ^ Nutton V (1981). "Continuity or Rediscovery? The City Physician in Classical Antiquity and Mediaeval Italy". In Russell AW (ed.). The Town and State Physician in Europe. Wolfenbüttel: Herzog August Bibliothek. pp. 9–46.
  110. ^ Rawcliffe C (2009). Leprosy in medieval England. The Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1-84383-454-0. OCLC 884314023.
  111. ^ Demaitre LE (2007). Leprosy in premodern medicine: a malady of the whole body. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-8613-3. OCLC 799983230.
  112. ^ Adam S (2006). Poverty and charity in medieval islam: mamluk egypt, 1250–1517. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-03474-4. OCLC 712129032.
  113. ^ Cascoigne AL (2007). "The Water Supply of Tinnīs: Public Amenities and Private Investments". In Bennison AK, Gascoigne AL (eds.). Cities in the Pre-Modern Islamic World: The Urban Impact of Religion, State and Society. London: Routledge. pp. 161–176.
  114. ^ Horden P (2000). "Ritual and Public Health in the Early Medieval City".". In Sheard S, Power H (eds.). Body and City: Histories of Urban Public Health. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate. pp. 17–40.
  115. ^ Falcón I (1998). "Aprovisionamiento y sanidad en Zaragoza en el siglo XV" [Provisioning and health in Zaragoza in the 15th century]. Acta Historica et Archaeologica Mediaeval (in Spanish). 19: 127–144.
  116. ^ Balestracci D (1998). Hundsbichler H, Jaritz G, Kühtreiber T (eds.). The Regulation of Public Health in Italian Medieval Towns. Die Vielfalt der Dinge: Neue Wege zur Analyse mittelaltericher Sachkultur. Vienna.
  117. ^ Ewert UC (2007). "Water, Public Hygiene and Fire Control in Medieval Towns: Facing Collective Goods Problems while Ensuring the Quality of Life". Historical Social Research/Historische Sozialforschung. 32: 222–252.
  118. ^ Petaros A, Skrobonja A, Culina T, Bosnar A, Frkovic V, Azman J (June 2013). "Public health problems in the medieval statutes of Croatian Adriatic coastal towns: from public morality to public health". Journal of Religion and Health. 52 (2): 531–7. doi:10.1007/s10943-011-9503-7. PMID 21674275.
  119. ^ Skelton LJ (2016). Sanitation in urban Britain, 1560–1700. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-21789-3. OCLC 933433427.
  120. ^ Carmichael AG (1983). "Plague legislation in the Italian Renaissance". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 57 (4): 508–25. PMID 6365216.
  121. ^ Geltner G (2019). "The Path to Pistoia: Urban Hygiene Before the Black Death". Past & Present (246): 3–33. doi:10.1093/pastj/gtz028. hdl:11245.1/3cff1e5a-78b1-4f40-a754-a28ffbb456cf.
  122. ^ Blažina-Tomić Z, Blažina V (2015). Expelling the plague: the health office and the implementation of quarantine in Dubrovnik, 1377–1533. McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-4539-7. OCLC 937888436.
  123. ^ Gall GE, Lautenschlager S, Bagheri HC (2016). "Quarantine as a public health measure against an emerging infectious disease: syphilis in Zurich at the dawn of the modern era (1496-1585)". GMS Hygiene and Infection Control. 11: Doc13. doi:10.3205/dgkh000273. PMC 4899769. PMID 27303653.
  124. ^ Cipolla CM (1973). Cristofano and the plague: a study in the history of public health in the age of Galileo. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-02341-2. OCLC 802505260.
  125. ^ Carmichael AG (2014) [1986]. Plague and the poor in Renaissance Florence. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-63436-7. OCLC 906714501.
  126. ^ Cohn S (2012). Cultures of plague: medical thinking at the end of the Renaissance. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-957402-5. OCLC 825731416.
  127. ^ a b c Rhodes P, Bryant JH (20 May 2019). "Public Health". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  128. ^ Carruthers GB, Carruthers LA (2005). A History of Britain's Hospitals. Book Guild Publishers. ISBN 978-1-85776-905-0.
  129. ^ Vale B (May 2008). "The Conquest of Scurvy in the Royal Navy 1793–1800: A Challenge to Current Orthodoxy". The Mariner's Mirror. 94 (2): 160–175. doi:10.1080/00253359.2008.10657052.
  130. ^ Selwyn S (July 1966). "Sir John Pringle: hospital reformer, moral philosopher and pioneer of antiseptics". Medical History. 10 (3): 266–274. doi:10.1017/s0025727300011133. PMC 1033606. PMID 5330009.
  131. ^ Thomas AJ (2010). The Lambeth cholera outbreak of 1848–1849: the setting, causes, course and aftermath of an epidemic in London. McFarland. pp. 55–6. ISBN 978-0-7864-3989-8.
  132. ^ Stacey M (1 June 2004). The Sociology of Health and Healing. Taylor and Francis. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-203-38004-8.
  133. ^ Finer SE (1952). The Life and Times of Sir Edwin Chadwick. Methuen. pp. 424–5. ISBN 978-0-416-17350-5.
  134. ^ a b Ashton J, Ubido J (April 1991). "The healthy city and the ecological idea" (PDF). Social History of Medicine. 4 (1): 173–180. doi:10.1093/shm/4.1.173. PMID 11622856. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 December 2013. Retrieved 8 July 2013.
  135. ^ Chadwick E (1842). "Chadwick's Report on Sanitary Conditions". excerpt from Report...from the Poor Law Commissioners on an Inquiry into the Sanitary Conditions of the Labouring Population of Great Britain (pp. 369–372) (online source). added by Laura Del Col: to The Victorian Web. Retrieved 8 November 2009.
  136. ^ Chadwick E (1843). Report on the Sanitary Condition of the Labouring Population of Great Britain. A Supplementary Report on the results of a Special Inquiry into The Practice of Interment in Towns. London: Printed by R. Clowes & Sons, for Her Majesty's Stationery Office. Full text at Internet Archive (archive.org)
  137. ^ Brunton D (2008). The Politics of Vaccination: Practice and Policy in England, Wales, Ireland, and Scotland, 1800–1874. University Rochester Press. p. 39. ISBN 9781580460361.
  138. ^ "Decline of Infant Mortality in England and Wales, 1871–1948: a Medical Conundrum". Retrieved 17 December 2012.
  139. ^ Mooney G (2015). Intrusive Interventions: Public Health, Domestic Space, and Infectious Disease Surveillance in England, 1840–1914. Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press. ISBN 9781580465274.
  140. ^ United States Public Health Service, Municipal Health Department Practice for the Year 1923 (Public Health Bulletin # 164, July 1926), pp. 348, 357, 364
  141. ^ "Public Health under the Third Reich". perspectives.ushmm.org. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  142. ^ Eckart WU (May 1989). "[Public health service in the Weimar Republic and in the early history of West Germany]". Das Offentliche Gesundheitswesen. 51 (5): 213–221. ISSN 0029-8573. PMID 2525688.
  143. ^ Bachrach S (July 2004). "In the name of public health--Nazi racial hygiene" (PDF). The New England Journal of Medicine. 351 (5): 417–420. doi:10.1056/NEJMp048136. PMID 15282346. Archived (PDF) from the original on 14 January 2024.
  144. ^ Vinten-Johansen P, Brody H, Paneth N, Rachman S, Rip M, Zuck D (2003). Cholera, Chloroform, and the Science of Medicine: A Life of John Snow. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-513544-X.
  145. ^ Johnson S (2006). The Ghost Map: The Story of London's Most Terrifying Epidemic – and How it Changed Science, Cities and the Modern World. Riverhead Books. ISBN 1-59448-925-4.
  146. ^ Porta M (2014). A Dictionary of Epidemiology (6th ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-997673-7.
  147. ^ Chowdhury JL. "Laboc Hospital – A Noble Prize Winner's Workplace". India: Eastern Panorama. Archived from the original on 5 November 2013. Retrieved 11 July 2013.
  148. ^ Marriott E (1966). Plague. A Story of Science, Rivalry and the Scourge That Won't Go Away. ISBN 978-1-4223-5652-4.
  149. ^ a b c Pineo RF (1996). "Public Health". m Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture. Vol. 4. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
  150. ^ Pierce JR, Writer J (2005). Yellow Jack: How Yellow Fever Ravaged America and Walter Reed Discovered its Deadly Secrets. Hoboken, NJ: J. Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-47261-2.
  151. ^ a b c "Achievements in Public Health, 1900–1999" (PDF). Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. Vol. 48, no. 50. U.S. Department of Health & Human Services. 24 December 1999.
  152. ^ Public Health Agency of Canada. Canadian Public Health Workforce Core Competencies, accessed 19 April 2011.
  153. ^ Murugesu L, Heijmans M, Rademakers J, Fransen MP (4 May 2022). Nayyar A (ed.). "Challenges and solutions in communication with patients with low health literacy: Perspectives of healthcare providers". PLOS ONE. 17 (5): e0267782. Bibcode:2022PLoSO..1767782M. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0267782. PMC 9067671. PMID 35507632.
  154. ^ White F (2013). "The Imperative of Public Health Education: A Global Perspective". Medical Principles and Practice. 22 (6): 515–529. doi:10.1159/000354198. PMC 5586806. PMID 23969636.
  155. ^ Welch WH, Rose W (1915). Institute of Hygiene: Being a report by Dr. William H. Welch and Wickliffe Rose to the General Education Board, Rockefeller Foundation (Report). pp. 660–668. reprinted in Fee E (1992). The Welch-Rose Report: Blueprint for Public Health Education in America (PDF). Washington, DC: Delta Omega Honorary Public Health Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 May 2012.
  156. ^ a b c d Patel K, Rushefsky ME, McFarlane DR (2005). The Politics of Public Health in the United States. M.E. Sharpe. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-7656-1135-2.
  157. ^ Brandt AM, Gardner M (May 2000). "Antagonism and accommodation: interpreting the relationship between public health and medicine in the United States during the 20th century". American Journal of Public Health. 90 (5): 707–715. doi:10.2105/AJPH.90.5.707. PMC 1446218. PMID 10800418.
  158. ^ White KL (1991). Healing the schism: Epidemiology, medicine, and the public's health. New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-0-387-97574-0.
  159. ^ Darnell R (2008). Histories of anthropology annual. University of Nebraska Press. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-8032-6664-3.
  160. ^ Dyer JP (1966). Tulane: the biography of a university, 1834-1965. Harper & Row. p. 136.
  161. ^ Burrow GN (2002). A history of Yale's School of Medicine: passing torches to others. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300132885. OCLC 182530966.
  162. ^ Education of the Physician: International Dimensions. Education Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates., Association of American Medical Colleges. Meeting. (1984 : Chicago, Ill), p. v.
  163. ^ Terris M (March 1987). "The Profession of Public Health". Conference on Education, Training, and the Future of Public Health. Washington, DC: Board on Health Care Services, National Academy Press. p. 53.
  164. ^ Sheps CG (1973). "Schools of Public Health in Transition". The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly. Health and Society. 51 (4): 462–468. doi:10.2307/3349628. JSTOR 3349628.
  165. ^ Kar SB (18 May 2018). Empowerment of Women for Promoting Health and Quality of Life. Oxford University Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-19-938467-9.
  166. ^ "Schools of Public Health and Public Health Programs" (PDF). Council on Education for Public Health. 11 March 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 June 2012. Retrieved 30 March 2011.
  167. ^ Communications B (4 June 2023). "Doctor of Health Science vs. Medical Science: Which Is Better?". Bouvé College of Health Sciences. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  168. ^ Bridgeport Uo (25 August 2021). "Ph.D. vs. Doctor of Health Science | University of Bridgeport". University of Bridgeport News. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  169. ^ "DrPH vs. PhD: What's the Difference?". publichealth.tulane.edu. 1 December 2022. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  170. ^ Berke O, Sobkowich K, Bernardo TM (November 2020). "Celebration day: 400th birthday of John Graunt, citizen scientist of London". Environmental Health Review. 63 (3): 67–69. doi:10.5864/d2020-018. ISSN 0319-6771. S2CID 228938397.
  171. ^ Winkelstein W (July 2008). "Lemuel Shattuck: architect of American public health". Epidemiology. 19 (4): 634. doi:10.1097/EDE.0b013e31817307f2. PMID 18552594.
  172. ^ The Commonwealth Fund (1936). "Snow on cholera: A reprint of two paper: John Snow, M.D". The Health Officer. 1 (8): 306.
  173. ^ Halliday S (2013). The Great Stink of London: Sir Joseph Bazalgette and the Cleansing of the Victorian Metropolis. The History Press. ISBN 978-0752493787.
  174. ^ "A Theory of Germs". Science, Medicine, and Animals. National Academies Press (US). 4 January 2024.
  175. ^ Lakhtakia R (February 2014). "The Legacy of Robert Koch: Surmise, search, substantiate". Sultan Qaboos University Medical Journal. 14 (1): e37–e41. doi:10.12816/0003334. PMC 3916274. PMID 24516751.
  176. ^ "On this day (11.12.1843): Robert Koch: The Man who Saved Millions of Lives". history.info.
  177. ^ Beitsch LM, Yeager VA, Moran J (March 2015). "Deciphering the imperative: translating public health quality improvement into organizational performance management gains". Annual Review of Public Health. 36 (1): 273–287. doi:10.1146/annurev-publhealth-031914-122810. PMID 25494050.
  178. ^ Hansen B (January 2002). "Public careers and private sexuality: some gay and lesbian lives in the history of medicine and public health". American Journal of Public Health. 92 (1): 36–44. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2005.079145. PMC 1470556. PMID 11772756.
  179. ^ Mackie EM, Wilson TS (12 November 1994). "Obituary N.I.Wattie". British Medical Journal. 309: 1297.
  180. ^ Asimov N (1 September 2005). "Ruth Huenemann – pioneer in study of childhood obesity". Hearts Newspapers. SF Gate. Retrieved 7 September 2022.
  181. ^ "Mangalurean doctor's pilot project helps bring down malnutrition in Yelburga". The Times of India. 27 August 2023. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 23 September 2023.
  182. ^ "Canada: International Health Care System Profiles". international.commonwealthfund.org. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
  183. ^ Jalil H (2015). Curing a Sick Nation: Public Health and Citizenship in Colombia, 1930–1940 (PhD thesis). University of California, Santa Barbara.
  184. ^ Pacino N (2013). Prescription for a Nation: Public Health in Post-Revolutionary Bolivia, 1952–1964 (PhD dissertation thesis). University of California, Santa Barbara.
  185. ^ "Ghana". CDC Global Health. Retrieved 9 April 2018.
  186. ^ a b c Agyepong IA, Manderson L (January 1999). "Mosquito avoidance and bed net use in the Greater Accra Region, Ghana". Journal of Biosocial Science. 31 (1): 79–92. doi:10.1017/S0021932099000796. PMID 10081239. S2CID 42129995.
  187. ^ "Ghana Demographic and Health Survey 2014" (PDF). Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  188. ^ Mitchell A (1991). The Divided Path: The German Influence on Social Reform in France After 1870. University of North Carolina Press. pp. 252–275. ISBN 0807857432.
  189. ^ Hildreth ML (1987). Doctors, Bureaucrats & Public Health in France, 1888–1902.
  190. ^ Klaus A (1993). Every Child a Lion: The Origins of Maternal & Infant Health Policy in the United States & France, 1890–1920.
  191. ^ Shapiro AL (1980). "Private rights, public interest, and professional jurisdiction: the French Public Health Law of 1902". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 54 (1): 4–22. PMID 6991034.
  192. ^ Donald Cooper, Epidemic Disease in Mexico City, 1761–1813: An Administrative, Social, and Medical History. Austin: University of Texas Press 1965.
  193. ^ Agostoni C (2003). Monuments of Progress: Modernization and Public Health in Mexico City, 1876–1910. Calgary, Boulder, Mexico City: University of Calgary Press; University of Colorado Press; Instituto de Investigaciones Históricos.
  194. ^ Soto Laveaga G, Agostoni C (March 2011). "Science and public health in the century of Revolution.". In Beezley WH (ed.). A companion to Mexican history and culture. Oxford, UK: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 561–574. doi:10.1002/9781444340600.ch33. ISBN 978-1-4443-4060-0.
  195. ^ Alexander AR (2016). City on Fire: Technology, Social Change, and the Hazards of Progress in Mexico City, 1860–1910. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press.
  196. ^ Pilcher JM (2006). The Sausage Rebellion: Public Health, Private Enterprise, and Meat in Mexico City, 1890–1917. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
  197. ^ Pani AJ (1916). La higiene en México (in Spanish). Mexico: Imprenta de J. Ballescá.
  198. ^ Bliss K (1 February 1999). "The science of redemption: syphilis, sexual promiscuity, and reformism in revolutionary Mexico City". The Hispanic American Historical Review. 79 (1): 1–40. doi:10.1215/00182168-79.1.1. PMID 21162337.
  199. ^ Aréchiga Córdoba E (2005). "Educación, propaganda o 'Dictadura sanitaria'. Estrategias discursivas de higiene y salubridad pública en el México posrevolucionario, 1917–1934". Dynamis. 25: 117–143.
  200. ^ Mazzaferri AJ (1968). Public Health and Social Revolution in Mexico (PhD thesis). Kent State University.
  201. ^ Sowell D (2015). Medicine on the Periphery: Public Health in Yucatán, 1870–1960. Lanham: Lexington Books.
  202. ^ Leider JP, Resnick B, Bishai D, Scutchfield FD (April 2018). "How Much Do We Spend? Creating Historical Estimates of Public Health Expenditures in the United States at the Federal, State, and Local Levels". Annual Review of Public Health. 39 (1): 471–487. doi:10.1146/annurev-publhealth-040617-013455. PMID 29346058.
  203. ^ a b Himmelstein DU, Woolhandler S (January 2016). "Public Health's Falling Share of US Health Spending". American Journal of Public Health. 106 (1): 56–57. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2015.302908. PMC 4695931. PMID 26562115.
  204. ^ Alfonso YN, Leider JP, Resnick B, McCullough JM, Bishai D (April 2021). "US Public Health Neglected: Flat Or Declining Spending Left States Ill Equipped To Respond To COVID-19". Health Affairs. 40 (4): 664–671. doi:10.1377/hlthaff.2020.01084. PMC 9890672. PMID 33764801. S2CID 232367227.
  205. ^ Institute of Medicine (2012). For the Public's Health: Investing in a Healthier Future. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. p. 2. doi:10.17226/13268. ISBN 978-0-309-22107-8. PMID 24830052.
  206. ^ "Health Care Costs Accounted for 17.7 Percent of GDP in 2018". California Health Care Foundation. 2 June 2020. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
  207. ^ Nunn R, Parsons J, Shambaugh J (10 March 2020). "A dozen facts about the economics of the US health-care system". Brookings Institution. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
  208. ^ Wallace M, Sharfstein JM (January 2022). "The Patchwork U.S. Public Health System". The New England Journal of Medicine. 386 (1): 1–4. doi:10.1056/NEJMp2104881. PMID 34979071. S2CID 245640052.
  209. ^ "Explore Public Health Funding in the United States | 2021 Annual Report". America's Health Rankings. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
  210. ^ "GHJP Report Calls for Reinvestment to Revive Public Health in the U.S." Yale Law School. 7 June 2021. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
  211. ^ Eager W, Herman D, House M, Robinson L, Williams C (2021). Confronting a legacy of scarcity: a plan for America's reinvestment in U.S. public health (PDF). Yale School of Public Health.
  212. ^ "The Impact of Chronic Underfunding on America's Public Health System: Trends, Risks, and Recommendations, 2021". Trust for America's Health. 7 May 2021. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
The offline app allows you to download all of Wikipedia's medical articles in an app to access them when you have no Internet.
Wikipedia's health care articles can be viewed offline with the Medical Wikipedia app.