Volume 6, Issue 7
مرور بر اساس
ارسال های اخیر
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Labonté Identifies Key Issues for Health Promoters in the New World Order; Comment on “Health Promotion in an Age of Normative Equity and Rampant Inequality”
(Kerman University of Medical Sciences, 2017-07-01)For over 35 years Ronald Labonté has been critically analyzing the state of health promotion in Canada and the world. In 1981, he identified the shortcomings of the groundbreaking Lalonde Report by warning of the seductive ...
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Forced Migration and Global Responsibility for Health; Comment on “Defining and Acting on Global Health: The Case of Japan and the Refugee Crisis”
(Kerman University of Medical Sciences, 2017-07-01)Forced migration has become a world-wide phenomenon in the past century, affecting increasing numbers of countries and people. It entails important challenges from a global health perspective. Leppold et al have critically ...
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Just Say No to the TPP: A Democratic Setback for American and Asian Public Health; Comment on “The Trans-Pacific Partnership: Is It Everything We Feared for Health?”
(Kerman University of Medical Sciences, 2017-07-01)The article by Labonté, Schram, and Ruckert is a significant and timely analysis of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) policy and the severe threats to public health that it implies for 12 Pacific Rim populations from the ...
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“Not Everything That Is Faced Can Be Changed, but Nothing Can Be Changed Until It Is Faced”: A Response to Recent Commentaries
(Kerman University of Medical Sciences, 2017-07-01)
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Cost-Effectiveness of Rural Incentive Packages for Graduating Medical Students in Lao PDR
(Kerman University of Medical Sciences, 2017-07-01)Background The dearth of health workers in rural settings in Lao People's Democratic Republic (PDR) and other developing countries limits healthcare access and outcomes. In evaluating non-wage financial incentive ...
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Impact of Health Research Systems on Under-5 Mortality Rate: A Trend Analysis
(Kerman University of Medical Sciences, 2017-07-01)Background Between 1990 and 2015, under-5 mortality rate (U5MR) declined by 53%, from an estimated rate of 91 deaths per 1000 live births to 43, globally. The aim of this study was to determine the share of health ...



