Public health vs. politics
Harvard Public Health magazine
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It may feel front of mind this week, but the long reach of partisanship into health care is nothing new—or unique to the United States. Paul Adepoju talks to Kai Ruggeri, a professor of health policy and management at Columbia University’s school of public health, about political polarization and its relationship to public health. Ruggeri’s research has found that all over the world, people’s health choices increasingly align with their political points of view, rather than medical advice.
Public health vs. politics → by Paul Adepoju
Superbugs and hurricanes
What do these two things have to do with each other? It’s all about a lesser-known effect of flooding: unsafe water carried from a contained space into a public one. The prime example in this piece by AMR Action Fund CEO Henry Skinner: In 2017, “Hurricane Harvey sent at least 31 million gallons of raw sewage streaming into Houston’s neighborhoods,” leading to “alarming levels” of superbugs in flooded homes.
Superbugs and hurricanes → by Henry Skinner
Weaving data into the fabric of public health
Many people in the public health sphere, including a writer or two from HPH, have been beating the data modernization drum for years. One solution professionals in Maryland found: put health information exchanges—data infrastructure from another part of the health ecosystem—to work for public health.
Weaving data into the fabric of public health → by J. Lester Feder
Community information exchanges quench health data droughts
Health workers often struggle to identify the social problems at the root of people’s health problems. Where health information exchanges—like the ones in the story above—aren’t yet coming through with more helpful data, some communities are filling in the gaps with ?“community information exchanges.” The projects are on a mission to “blow the roofs off the silos of information,” in the words of one community leader—and they could provide a roadmap for the rest of the country.
Community information exchanges quench health data droughts → by J. Lester Feder
Snapshot: Factory farms pose health risks for workers and people who live nearby
Researchers looked at how practices in U.S. concentrated animal feeding operations, often known as factory farms, affect the health of local communities and the climate.
Factory farms pose health risks for workers and people who live nearby → by Leah Rosenbaum
What we’re reading this week
As the pandemic deepened, Americans kept drinking more → The New York Times
?If you read our op-ed on North Carolina’s Healthy Opportunities Pilots, you’re probably wondering if the state decided to renew the program. The short answer: not yet. They’ve punted that decision to next month, but thanks to a temporary extension, the program will keep going in the meantime.
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—Jo Zhou
Joan and Julius Jacobson Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health - Former Dean of Faculty
1 周Excellent article/interview. A must read.