Freedom to lead a life we have reason to value? A spotlight on health inequity in the Asia Pacific region

Date

2011-03

Authors

Chiang, Tung-liang
Hashimoto, Hideki
Jayasinghe, Saroj
Loring, Belinda
Matheson, Don
Nguyen, Huong Thanh
Rao, Mala
Friel, Sharon

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Volume Title

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Abstract

The Asia Pacific region is home to more than 60% of the world’s population. Life expectancy at birth differs between countries by as much as 27 years. This article suggests that asymmetric economic growth, unplanned urbanization, marked environmental change, unequal improvements in daily living conditions, and the unequal distribution and access to quality health care have contributed to health inequities in the Asia Pacific region. Contextually specific evidence and action are needed. This requires ongoing monitoring of health inequities and systematic evaluation of societal changes and their impact on health inequities. It requires better understanding of how to translate theoretical and empirical demonstrations of the social and environmental impact on health inequities into evidence-informed policies and programs, in diverse geopolitical, socioeconomic, and sociocultural contexts across the Asia Pacific region and the range of associated complex policy processes. A spotlight is needed on health inequities and their causes else the status quo will persist.

Description

Keywords

Asia Pacific, social determinants, economic development, climate change, urbanization, social policy, economic policy, health inequities

Citation

Source

Asia-Pacific Journal of Public Health 23.2 (2011): 246– 263

Type

Journal article

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