Titre : | The European health report 2009 : health and health systems. |
Auteurs : | Enis BARIS, dir. ; Conseil Général de l'alimentation de l'agriculture et des espaces ruraux (CGAAER) (Paris, FRA) |
Type de document : | Rapport |
Editeur : | Copenhagen [DNK] : WHO Regional Office for Europe, 2009 |
ISBN : | 978-92-890-1415-1 |
Description : | 191p. pdf |
Langues: | Anglais |
Mots-clés : | Soins ; Etat santé ; Facteur risque ; Accès soins ; Donnée statistique ; Personne âgée ; Personne handicapée ; Epidémie ; Indicateur santé ; Indicateur ; Conjoncture économique & sociale ; H1N1 ; Qualité vie ; Information sociale ; Santé publique [généralité] ; Facteur socioculturel ; Qualité des services ; Crise économique ; Indicateur santé [épidémiologie] ; Facteur socioéconomique ; Politique santé ; Système santé ; Evaluation ; Santé environnementale ; Condition vie ; Espérance vie ; Mortalité ; Europe |
Résumé : | [BDSP. Notice produite par SAPHIR pE8BFR0x. Diffusion soumise à autorisation]. The WHO European Region includes 53 Member States and nearly 900 million people living in diverse cultural, economic, social and political circumstances. Although the Region has the highest average score on the Human Development Index of any WHO region, significant inequity remains within and between countries or population groups, especially in health ; inequity in health is the avoidable and unjust systematic differences in health status between groups in a given society. How well do Member States in the Region fulfil their aim of promoting health and reducing inequity, given the demographic, epidemiological, technological, environmental, socioeconomic and fiscal challenges that they face ? The European health report 2009 reviews and assesses public health indicators and trends during the past four years. Since 2005, European governments have taken a health systems approach towards combating ill health, promoting healthy lifestyles and reducing inequality in health. This report reflects the fact that the European Region is experiencing great change, internally through reforms of health systems and externally due to global crises, causing great uncertainty in both health systems and outcomes. Although several global trends affect health, the global economic recession and the new pandemic (H1N1) 2009 influenza are the most acute. [... ] [Author, p. 2]. |
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