Sentences with phrase «health inequalities into»

A failure to link concerns about rural health inequalities into wider national and global debates about inequality is a missed opportunity, both for raising awareness about the issues at play, as well as for identifying potential solutions.

Not exact matches

The problem, he says, is that Trump has turned the race into «more of a celebrity sweepstakes» that focuses on one candidate's personality while ignoring a host of important policy issues, from income inequality and health care to job creation.
New GPs will be parachuted into deprived areas in a bid to reduce health inequalities, the government announced today.
The latter have long been on the public health agenda, but we are arguing that in order to make the most effective challenge to health inequalities, in addition a much wider range of intervention needs to be brought into play.
Monday 11 March 2013 2.30 pm Oral Questions Plans to tackle inequality in income and wealth in the UK - Lord Dubs Consequences for access to justice for those who will not be able to receive free legal advice on social welfare law matters from 1 April - Lord Bach Future railway re-openings - Lord Faulkner of Worcester Progress towards achieving the projected increase in the size of the UK's reserve forces - Lord Rosser Legislation Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Bill - Report stage (Day 4)- Viscount Younger of Leckie Short Debate Recommendations of the Francis Report into the Mid-Staffordshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust - Lord Patel Short Debate Impact of NHS innovation and research strategies on health improvement and wealth creation - Lord Kakkar
Let me point to 10 things that I sketched out this morning: too much money spent on administration and bureaucracy and not enough on front - line patient care; too little patient - centric information to inform decision making; too little innovation; too little clinical input into decision making; too much inertia and hostility to reform, as we have seen today; too much process - driven target culture distorting clinical decision making; falling productivity; poor outcomes across a range of clinical indicators; too often, weak commissioning of servicing; and widening health inequalities in the past 10 years, in addition to the scandals that occurred in Staffordshire and Kent.
«It is important to understand such patterns, because if inequality in the offline world translates into differential resources online, especially those that affect health over time, then new technologies like social network sites could exacerbate rather than reduce health disparities.»
A world - first University of Melbourne — led study into the health and well - being of more than 154 million Indigenous and tribal people globally has revealed the extent of work that needs to be done if the UN is to meet its 2030 goals of ending poverty and inequality.
To that end, the symposium will hear from Dr Laia Becares, from the University of Manchester, who is leading a three year research project into health inequalities experienced by ethnic minorities in the UK, US and New Zealand (NZ), which has looked specifically at the impact of both maternal and neighbourhood experiences of racism.
That research base compares poorly to work that UK researcher Dr Laia Becares, from the University of Manchester, is able to undertake in a three - year research project into health inequalities experienced by ethnic minorities in the UK, US and New Zealand (NZ).
Experts have shown in study after study that high - quality early care and education produce external benefits that are abundant and long - lasting.29 Quality child care may be costly, but many of its associated benefits spill over into society over time, reducing inequality in educational, health, and social outcomes.
This section provides an overview of the commitments and processes that have been entered into by governments and the potential contributions of each of these to addressing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health inequality.
First, we can no longer accept the making of commitments to address Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health inequality without putting into place processes and programs to match the stated commitments.
I believe that the COAG commitments, the signing of the Close the Gap Statement of Intent and the development of the Indigenous Health Equality Targets mark a watershed in the history of Indigenous health: the moment when we dared to take our dreams of a future in which Indigenous and non - Indigenous Australians stand as equals in terms of health and life expectation and began to turn them into reality; the moment when we said «enough is enough» and began to set in place an ambitious, yet realistic, plan to bring Indigenous health inequality to an end within our lifeHealth Equality Targets mark a watershed in the history of Indigenous health: the moment when we dared to take our dreams of a future in which Indigenous and non - Indigenous Australians stand as equals in terms of health and life expectation and began to turn them into reality; the moment when we said «enough is enough» and began to set in place an ambitious, yet realistic, plan to bring Indigenous health inequality to an end within our lifehealth: the moment when we dared to take our dreams of a future in which Indigenous and non - Indigenous Australians stand as equals in terms of health and life expectation and began to turn them into reality; the moment when we said «enough is enough» and began to set in place an ambitious, yet realistic, plan to bring Indigenous health inequality to an end within our lifehealth and life expectation and began to turn them into reality; the moment when we said «enough is enough» and began to set in place an ambitious, yet realistic, plan to bring Indigenous health inequality to an end within our lifehealth inequality to an end within our lifetimes.
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