Results 41-60 of about 175
  1. ... in the United States vs. other countries? The United States experiences a notably higher burden of chronic disease compared to peer nations . Analyses across high-income countries—including Australia, Canada, ...
  2. ... especially concerning given that life expectancy in the United States is lower than other Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development nations, and primary care is the only component of ...
  3. ... at once bold and elusive, even for the United States as the world’s wealthiest nation. The WHO definition is clear that health derives ...
  4. ... large bene fi ts from targeted not surprisingly, nations (including the United States) assignment of assets but is problematic when ...
  5. ... during the COVID-19 pandemic. Also, not surprisingly, nations (including the United States) often prevented export of PPE, medications, and ...
  6. ... at once bold and elusive, even for the United States as the world’s wealthiest nation. The WHO definition is clear that health derives ...
  7. ... in Irvine, California, drew participants from across the United States. Photo: Amy Geller The National Academies co-hosted two hackathons aimed at spurring tech solutions to the nation’s STI crisis. Meet some of the innovators ...
  8. ... especially concerning given that life expectancy in the United States is lower than other Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development nations, and primary care is the only component of ...
  9. ... many basic lessons learned are lessons unapplied. The United States’ population health outcomes lag behind its highly economically developed peers. Our nation’s health system is still firmly entrenched in ...
  10. ... s essential value for the health of the nation, more than 100 million people across rural and urban communities in the United States are experiencing a calamitous lack of access ...
  11. ... Nation Commission on Investment Imperatives for a Healthy Nation Read the Commission Charge Commission Members Background The United States’ health and health care system is considered ...
  12. ... recognized as among the highest priorities for our nation’s health system. There is increasing concern about a growing shortage of nurses in the United States and globally. The exclusion of nursing from ...
  13. ... the pandemic in other countries undoubtedly benefits the United States as well, as we cannot begin to fully recover here until the threat of the pandemic subsides in other nations. Even a temporary halt in U.S. funding ...
  14. ... any other socially defined circumstance. Currently in the United States, the burdens of disease and poor health and the benefits of well-being and good health are inequitably distributed with negative consequences for the nation’s well-being, prosperity, and economic competitiveness. Although ...
  15. ... of the impact of overdose deaths on the nation and the dramatically increasing rates of OUD and other related SUDs in the United States over the past 20 years, it is ...
  16. ... This thought experiment therefore indicates how far the United States health ... disease, the nation trails more than three dozen countries on population ...
  17. ... at: ... nation’s first publicly recognized overdose prevention centers: Lessons ...
  18. ... use, another significant driver of mortality in the United States. From 1975 to ... et al., 2012). Our nation has the capacity to change for the better ...
  19. ... the largest integrated health care network in the United States, with 1,380 ... 2.8 million of the nation’s estimated 3.3 million people who identify ...
  20. ... population should still be concerned. Everyone in the United States feels ... nation’s economy. Nearly incalculable unrecovered and unbudgeted dollars ...
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