Robinson, Robert G.
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Abstract
For well over two decades, the public health community has undertaken a broad range of initiatives to identify and eliminate various health-related disparities among popula tions. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s(CDC) Office on Smoking and Health (OSH),for example, has committed resources to help states eliminate population disparities related to tobacco use.These initiatives have enjoyed a degree of success and some measurable decreases in population disparities. However, traditional public health approaches that are overly influenced by reductionist paradigms more content with risk factor assessment of at-risk strata may not be sufficient to produce successful results when applied to more intractable disparities. The elimination of disparities will require a more encompassing and comprehensive approach that addresses both population strata at risk and the communities in which they reside. This article proposes a new, concentrated model to address the elimination of population disparities—a model that focuses on community as the critical unit of analysis and action to achieve success.
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| Item Type: | Article |
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| Uncontrolled Keywords: | disparity; race; community; sexual orientation; social structure; racism; socioeconomic status; ethnicity; competence; development |
| Subjects: | Teaching Practice > outreach Practice Health > Disparities Practice > interventions Health Practice > service Health > Public Health > Health Risk Factors Health > Public Health > Health Risk Factors > Smoking & Tobacco Use Research > methodologies Health > Public Health |
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| Depositing User: | Users 24 not found. |
| Date Deposited: | 05 Apr 2011 |
| Last Modified: | 18 Apr 2011 11:28 |
| Link to this item (URI): | http://health-equity.pitt.edu/id/eprint/564 |
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