Search Results
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Health Divides: Where You Live Can Kill You
by Clare BambraHIGHLY COMMENDED IN THE BMA BOOK AWARDS 2017 Americans live three years less than their counterparts in France or Sweden. Scottish men survive two years less than English men. Across Europe, women in the poorest communities live up to ten years less than those in the richest. Revealing gaps in life... More
Language: ENGCopyright: 2016 -
Health in Hard Times: Austerity and Health Inequalities
by Clare BambraAvailable Open Access under CC-BY-NC licence. How has austerity impacted on health and wellbeing in the UK? Health in Hard Times explores its repercussions for social inequalities in health. The result of five years of research, the book draws on a case study of Stockton-on-Tees in the north-east ... More
Language: ENGCopyright: 2019 -
How Politics Makes Us Sick
Since the early 1980s, neoliberalism or 'market fundamentalism' has dominated politics and economics across the globe. In this important book, Ted Schrecker and Clare Bambra consider the effects of over three decades of these policies with particular reference to the US and the UK. They focus on o... More
Language: ENGCopyright: 2015 -
The Unequal Pandemic: COVID-19 and Health Inequalities
by Clare Bambra • Julia LynchIt has been claimed that we are ‘all in it together’ and that the COVID-19 virus ‘does not discriminate’. This accessible, yet authoritative book dispels this myth of COVID-19 as an ‘equal opportunity’ disease, by showing how the pandemic is a syndemic of disease and inequality. Drawing on intern... More
Language: ENGCopyright: 2021 -
Ageing and Health: The Politics of Better Policies (European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies)
by Scott L. Greer • Clare Bambra • Jonathan Cylus • Julia Lynch • Jane Gingrich • Aaron Reeves • Michelle FalkenbachOne of the most important political and economic challenges facing Europe and elsewhere is the ageing of societies. Must ageing populations create conflict between generations and crisis for health systems? Our answer is no. The problem is not so much demographic change as the political and policy c... More
Language: ENGCopyright: 2021