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MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
Britain is sick and it needs saving. Covid-19 has brought death, disruption and disorder. It has revealed fundamental failures in public policy and our approach to health. For years, the same failures have perpetuated a host of modern plagues - long-running deadly epidemics in diabetes, depression and heart disease. These plagues pose systemic risks to society itself.
In this timely book, Yuille and Ollier envisage a society that always puts the health of citizens first: the 'Health Society'. The time for dithering and tinkering has passed. Prevention of disease is a task for all branches of government - not just the NHS but also for every workplace, employer, community and citizen. The 'Health Society' means working in radically new ways to extend our healthy lives and sustainably increase national prosperity.
Saving sick Britain follows the science and lays down a challenge to us all: are we ready to make the change required to end these modern plagues? In answering the question the book helps steer the reader towards rethinking what both 'prevention' and 'health' mean in modern Britain.
This book is relevant to United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 3, Good health and well-being. -- .
Contents:
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction: the heart of the matter
Part I
1 Words about words
2 The modern plagues
3 Sorrows in battalions
4 Your loss is my loss: we all lose
5 Deckchairs on the Titantic
Part II
6 The appliance of science
7 When things start to go wrong
8 Knowing the unknown
9 Risks that we can change
Part III
10 Biological relativity
11 Natural prevention
12 Health is what we need
Part IV
13 Thinking outside the box
14 The road to recovery
15 Community change
16 The tools for the job
17 Your health is my health
18 Postscript: the COVID-19 pandemic
Notes
Suggested reading
Index -- .
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Publication date: February, 2021
Pages: 280
Weight: 652g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: General Practice, Public Health