Not exact matches
Health care for the
poor, education in the inner city, job training for welfare mothers, discipline for criminally offending youths, improvement of community
infrastructure and housing, nutrition for infants, drug treatment for recovering addicts» all of these things and more require the provision of
public funds and are essential to the progress we seek.
Stuart Shalat, director of the Division of Environmental
Health at Georgia State University's School of
Public Health, points out that the nation's aging
infrastructure is making it increasingly difficult to protect kids from any number of environmental risks, particularly in
poor communities.
It barely made a dent in sub-Saharan Africa, where
public health infrastructure was
poor and malaria was most prevalent.