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"Rural health"
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The State of Rural Public Health: Enduring Needs in a New Decade
by
Leider, Jonathon P.
,
Dekker, Debra
,
Bishai, David
in
Advocacy
,
AJPH Rural Health
,
Coronavirus Infections
2020
Public health in the rural United States is a complex and underfunded enterprise. While urban–rural disparities have been a focus for researchers and policymakers alike for decades, inequalities continue to grow. Life expectancy at birth is now 1 to 2 years greater between wealthier urban and rural counties, and is as much as 5 years, on average, between wealthy and poor counties. This article explores the growth in these disparities over the past 40 years, with roots in structural, economic, and social spending differentials that have emerged or persisted over the same time period. Importantly, a focus on place-based disparities recognizes that the rural United States is not a monolith, with important geographic and cultural differences present regionally. We also focus on the challenges the rural governmental public health enterprise faces, the so-called “double disparity” of worse health outcomes and behaviors alongside modest investment in health departments compared with their nonrural peers. Finally, we offer 5 population-based “prescriptions” for supporting rural public health in the United States. These relate to greater investment and supporting rural advocacy to better address the needs of the rural United States in this new decade.
Journal Article
Reforming China's rural health system
by
Wang, Shiyong
,
Zhang, Shuo
,
Wagstaff, Adam
in
Access to health care
,
ADVERSE SELECTION
,
AGRICULTURAL POPULATION
2009
'Reforming China's Rural Health System' examines the performance and workings of China's rural health system leading up to the reforms of the 2000s, outlines the reforms, and presents some early evidence on their impacts. The authors outline ideas for building on these reforms to further strengthen China's rural health system, covering health financing and health insurance, service delivery, and public health. The authors conclude by using the experiences of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries to gaze into China's future, asking not only what China's health system might look like, but also how China might get there from where it is today. 'Reforming China's Rural Health System' will be of interest to health care policy makers, public health officials, university researchers, and others working to improve rural health and health service delivery in China and in other countries especially those in East and South Asia.
Rural Population Health and Aging: Toward a Multilevel and Multidimensional Research Agenda for the 2020s
by
Jensen, Leif
,
Sliwinski, Martin J.
,
Hunter, Lori M.
in
Aging
,
Aging (natural)
,
AJPH Rural Health
2020
The unique health and aging challenges of rural populations often go unnoticed. In fact, the rural United States is home to disproportionate shares of older and sicker people, there are large and growing rural–urban and within-rural mortality disparities, many rural communities are in population decline, and rural racial/ethnic diversity is increasing. Yet rural communities are not monolithic, and although some rural places are characterized by declining health, others have seen large improvements in population health. We draw on these realities to call for new research in five areas. First, research is needed to better describe health disparities between rural and urban areas and, because rural places are not monolithic, across rural America. Second, research is needed on how trends in rural population health and aging are affecting rural communities. Third, research is needed on the ways in which economic well-being and livelihood strategies interact with rural health and aging. Fourth, we need to better understand the health implications of the physical and social isolation characterizing many rural communities. Finally, we argue for new research on the implications of local natural environments and climate change for rural population health and aging.
Journal Article
Increasing access to health workers in remote and rural areas through improved retention : global policy recommendations
by
World Health Organization
in
Delivery of Health Care
,
Health Personnel
,
Human Resources for Health
2010
Half the world's people currently live in rural and remote areas. The problem is that most health workers live and work in cities. This imbalance is common to almost all countries and poses a major challenge to the nationwide provision of health services. Its impact, however, is most severe in low income countries. There are two reasons for this. One is that many of these countries already suffer from acute shortages of health workers - in all areas. The other is that the proportion of the population living in rural regions tends to be greater in poorer countries than in rich ones. The World Health Organization (WHO) has therefore drawn up a comprehensive set of strategies to help countries encourage health workers to live and work in remote and rural areas. These include refining the ways students are selected and educated, as well as creating better working and living conditions. The first step has been to establish what works, through a year-long process that has involved a wide range of experts from all regions of the world. The second is to share the results with those who need them, via the guidelines contained in this document. The third will be to implement them, and to monitor and evaluate progress, and - critically - to act on the findings of that monitoring and evaluation. The guidelines are a practical tool that all countries can use. As such, they complement the WHO Global Code of Practice on the International Recruitment of Health Personnel, adopted by the Sixty-third World Health Assembly in May 2010. The Code offers a framework to manage international migration over the medium to longer term. The guidelines are a tool that can be used straight away to address one of the first triggers to internal and international migration - dissatisfaction with living and working conditions in rural areas. Together, the code of practice and
these new guidelines provide countries with instruments to improve workforce distribution and enhance health services. Doing so will address a long-standing problem, contribute to more equitable access to health care, and boost prospects for improving maternal and child health and combating diseases such as AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria.
Identifying, treating, and preventing childhood trauma in rural communities
\"This book depicts the issues and challenges rural areas face when treating victims of trauma, especially children and adolescents by featuring information on language and cultural barriers, as well as the lack of resources available within these rustic environments\"-- Provided by publisher.
The Challenging Quest to Improve Rural Health Care
2018
In the United States, rural populations have a lower life expectancy than urban populations and face shortages of health care providers. This report discusses the challenges facing rural health care systems and efforts to expand the rural health care workforce.
Journal Article