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Science for reducing health inequalities emerges from social justice movements

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Article

Wing, Steve

New Solutions

2016

26

1

103-114

epidemiologic study ; health policy ; scientist ; health status ; social inequality

USA

Occupational safety and health

https://journals.sagepub.com/loi/NEW

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1048291116634098

English

Bibliogr.

"Although the health sciences have investigated economic and social inequalities in morbidity and mortality for hundreds of years, health inequalities persist and are, by some measures, increasing. This is not simply a situation in which the knowledge exists but is not implemented. Rather, science in general and epidemiology in particular have focused on quantifying the effects of specific agents considered in isolation. This approach is powerful, but, in the absence of ecological concepts that connect parts and wholes, contributes to maintaining health inequalities. By joining movements for human rights and social justice, health scientists can identify research questions that are relevant to public health, develop methods that are appropriate to answering those questions, and contribute to efforts to reduce health inequalities."

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