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The political context of social inequalities and health
Vicente Navarro,
Leiyu Shi
Bloomberg School of Public Health
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
270
Scopus citations
Overview
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Medicine & Life Sciences
Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development
79%
Population Health
63%
Health Status
50%
Unemployment
47%
Economics
45%
Infant Mortality
42%
Health
37%
Capitalism
36%
Income
31%
Public Expenditures
31%
Delivery of Health Care
23%
Salaries and Fringe Benefits
23%
Public Policy
21%
Child Care
20%
Home Care Services
20%
Insurance Benefits
20%
Datasets
15%
Statistics
15%
Public Health
13%
Mortality
9%
Arts & Humanities
Social Inequality
100%
Welfare State
52%
Health
50%
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
43%
Infant Mortality
38%
Labor
33%
Unemployment
32%
Social Democratic Parties
21%
Healthcare
20%
Political Parties
19%
Child Care
18%
Equity
17%
Economic Policy
17%
Mortality Rate
17%
Social Policy
17%
Income
17%
Voids
17%
Public Expenditure
16%
Equality
15%
Capitalism
15%
Public Health
14%
Statistics
13%
Wages
10%
Government
9%
Economics
7%
Social Sciences
social inequality
76%
OECD
44%
welfare state
43%
health
35%
infant mortality
34%
coverage
23%
health care
22%
type of employment
22%
full employment
21%
social democratic party
21%
wage labor
20%
employment policy
19%
labor statistics
19%
difference in income
19%
public expenditures
19%
unemployment rate
18%
public support
16%
labor force
15%
child care
15%
Economic Policy
15%
unemployment
13%
social economics
13%
Social Policy
13%
capitalist society
13%
equality
12%
public health
11%
determinants
11%
income
10%
literature
6%