Dekorationsartikel gehören nicht zum Leistungsumfang.
Oxford Textbook of Global Public Health
Taschenbuch von Roger Detels (u. a.)
Sprache: Englisch

462,95 €*

inkl. MwSt.

Versandkostenfrei per Post / DHL

Lieferzeit 1-2 Wochen

Kategorien:
Beschreibung
Invaluable for all practitioners, trainees, and students of public health and epidemiology, the Oxford Textbook of Global Public Health covers the scope, methods, and practice of public health and has been comprehensively updated for its seventh edition.
Invaluable for all practitioners, trainees, and students of public health and epidemiology, the Oxford Textbook of Global Public Health covers the scope, methods, and practice of public health and has been comprehensively updated for its seventh edition.
Über den Autor
Roger Detels is the Distinguished Professor of Epidemiology and Infectious Diseases, Schools of Public Health and Medicine at the University of California.

Quarraisha Abdool Karim is the Associate Scientific Director of CAPRISA, a Professor in Clinical Epidemiology at Columbia University, and Pro Vice-Chancellor (African Health) at the University of Kwazulu-Natal in South Africa.

Fran Baum is the Matthew Flinders Distinguished Professor of Public Health and Director of the Southgate Institute of Health at Flinders University in Australia.

Liming Li is a Professor of Epidemiology at the School of Public Health, Peking University Health Science Center, Beijing

Alastair H Leyland is the Associate Director and Senior Research Scientist at the MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow
Inhaltsverzeichnis
  • Section 1: The development of the discipline of public health

  • 1.1: Roger Detels and Chorh Chuan Tan: The scope and concerns of public health

  • 1.2: Simon Szreter: The history and development of public health in developed countries

  • 1.3: Nathan D. Wong: Epidemiology and prevention of cardiovascular disease

  • 1.4: Stephen Tollman and Jessica Price: Public health priorities in countries undergoing economic transition: the middle-income countries

  • 1.5: Kelley Lee: Globalization

  • Section 2: Determinants of health and disease

  • 2.1: Matthew Fisher, Belinda Townsend, Patrick Harris, Ashley Schram, and Fran Baum: Determinants of health: overview

  • 2.2: Kaitlyn B. McBride and Linda Rosenstock: Politics of public health

  • 2.3: Ronald Labonté, Frances Baum, and David Sanders: Poverty, justice, and health

  • 2.4: Frank J. van Lenthe and Johan P. Mackenbach: Socioeconomic inequalities in health in high-income countries: the facts and the options

  • 2.5: Paulo M. Buss, Romulo Paes-Souza, and Mauricio Barreto: Reducing health inequalities in developing countries

  • 2.6: Veron Ramsuran and Tulio de Oliveira: Genomics and public health

  • 2.7: Thomas Clasen: Water and sanitation

  • 2.8: Roger Shrimpton, David Sanders, and Anne Marie Thow: Food and nutrition

  • 2.9: Alistair Woodward and Alex Macmillan: Climate change and human health

  • 2.10: Lawrence W. Green, Kristin S. Hoeft, and Robert A. Hiatt: Behavioural determinants of health and disease

  • 2.11: Yvonne Inall, Rachel Lamdin Hunter, Stephen Leeder, and Angela Beaton: How access to health care affects population health

  • Section 3: Public health policies, law, and ethics

  • 3.1: Kevin A. Fenton: Leadership in public health

  • 3.2: Nancy Kass, Amy Paul, and Andrew Siegel: Ethical principles and ethical issues in public health

  • 3.3: Carmel Williams, Alison Blaiklock, and Paul Hunt: The right to health supports global public health

  • 3.4: Lawrence O. Gostin: Law and the public's health

  • 3.5: Thein T Htay, Yu Mon Saw, James Levinson, SM Kadri, Ailbhe Helen Brady, Cecilia S. Acquin, and Aung Soe Htet: Health policy in developing countries

  • 3.6: John Powles and Hebe Gouda: Public health policy in developed countries

  • Section 4: Information systems and sources of intelligence

  • 4.1: Tjeerd-Pieter van Staa and Liam Smeeth: Information systems in support of public health in high-income countries

  • 4.2: Zunyou Wu and Jennifer McGoogan: Community diagnosis and health information systems in low- and middle-income countries

  • 4.3: Patrick S Sullivan, Aaron J Siegler, and Lisa Hightow-Weidman: New communication technologies, social media, and public health

  • Section 5: Epidemiological and biostatistical approaches

  • 5.1: Roger Detels: Epidemiology: the foundation of public health

  • 5.2: Manolis Kogevinas and Leda Chatzi: Cross-sectional studies

  • 5.3: Sopon Iamsirithaworn, Panithee Thammawijaya, and Kumnuan Ungchusak: Principles of outbreak investigation

  • 5.4: Noel S. Weiss: Case-control studies

  • 5.5: Alvaro Muñoz and F. Javier Nieto: Cohort studies

  • 5.6: Jennie Popay and Fran Baum: Qualitative research imagination

  • 5.7: Kathy J Baisley, Richard J Hayes, and Lawrence H Moulton: Methodological issues in the design and analysis of cluster randomised trials

  • 5.8: John W. Farquhar and Lawrence W. Green: Community intervention trials in high-income countries

  • 5.9: Peter Craig: Natural and quasi experiments

  • 5.10: Fiona F Stanaway, Naomi Noguchi, Clement Loy, Sharon Reid, and Jonathan C. Craig: Clinical epidemiology

  • 5.11: Sander Greenland and Tyler J. VanderWeele: Validity and bias in epidemiological research

  • 5.12: Katherine J. Hoggatt, Tyler J. VanderWeele, and Sander Greenland: Causation and causal inference

  • 5.13: Nandi Siegfried and Lawrence Mbuagbaw: Systematic reviews and meta-analysis

  • 5.14: Gail Williams: Statistical methods

  • 5.15: Theo Vos and Christopher J.L. Murray: Measuring the health of populations: the Global Burden of Disease study methods

  • 5.16: Alex Welte and Cari van Schalkwyk: Mathematical models of transmission and control of infectious agents

  • 5.17: Nguyen Tran Hien, James W. Buehler, and Ann Marie Kimball: Public health surveillance

  • 5.18: Elizabeth Rose Mayeda, Alexandra M. Binder, and Lindsay C. Kobayashi: Life course epidemiology and analysis

  • Section 6: Social science techniques

  • 6.1: Stella R. Quah: Sociology and psychology in public health

  • 6.2: Richard Parker, Jonathan Garcia, Miguel Muñoz-Laboy, Marni Sommer, and Patrick Wilson: Sexuality and public healh

  • 6.3: Emily Grundy and Michael Murphy: Demography and public health

  • 6.4: Simon Carroll and Marcia Hills: Health promotion, health education, and the public's health

  • 6.5: Rona Campbell and Chris Bonell: Development and evaluation of complex multicomponent interventions in public health

  • 6.6: David Parkin, Stephen Morris, and Nancy Devlin: Economic appraisal in public health care: assessing efficiency and equity

  • 6.7: Alison Buttenheim and Harsha Thirumurthy: Behavioral economics and health

  • 6.8: Zhiyuan Hou and Na He: Governance and management of public health programmes

  • 6.9: Wafaa M. El-Sadr, Judith Wasserheit, Bryan Wiener, Andrea Howard, Catherine Hankins, Patricia J. Culligan, and Katherine Harripersaud: Implementation Science and translational public health

  • Section 7: Environmental and occupational health sciences

  • 7.1: Chien-Jen Chen and San-Lin You: Environmental health methods

  • 7.2: Leeka Kheifets, Adele Green, and Richard Wakeford: Radiation and public health

  • 7.3: David Koh and Wee Hoe Gan: Occupational health

  • 7.4: David Koh and Ro-Ting Lin: Toxicology and environmental risk analysis

  • 7.5: Baruch Fischhoff and Tamar Krishnamurti: Risk perception and communication

  • 7.6: Jason Corburn: Urbanization and health

  • Section 8: Major health problems

  • 8.1: Nathan D. Wong and Wenjun Fan: Epidemiology and prevention of cardiovascular disease

  • 8.2: Zuo-Feng Zhang, Paolo Boffetta, Alfred I. Neugut, and Carlo La Vecchia: Cancer epidemiology and public health

  • 8.3: Craig M. Riley, Jessica Bon, and Alison Morris: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma

  • 8.4: Anna Peeters and Tim Lobstein: Obesity

  • 8.5: Nyssa T. Hadgraft, Neville Owen, and Paddy C. Dempsey: Physical activity and public health

  • 8.6: Farah Naz Khan, Nida Izhar Shaikh, K.M. Venkat Narayan, and Mohammed K. Ali: Diabetes Mellitus

  • 8.7: Danuta Wasserman and Kristian Wahlbeck: Public mental health and suicide

  • 8.8: Amira S. Mohamed and Peter G. Robinson: Dental public health

  • 8.9: Lope H. Barrero: Musculoskeletal disorders

  • 8.10: Walter A. Kukull, Kumeren Govender, and James Bowen: Neurological diseases, epidemiology, and public health

  • 8.11: Davidson H. Hamer, Amira Khan, and Zulfiqar A. Bhutta: Infectious diseases and prions

  • 8.12: N. Kojima and J.D. Klausner: Sexually transmitted infections

  • 8.13: Quarraisha Abdool Karim, Urisha Singh, Cheryl Baxter, and Salim S. Abdool Karim: Acquired Immuno-Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS)

  • 8.14: Roxana Rustomjee: Tuberculosis

  • 8.15: Frank Baiden, Keziah L. Malm, and Fred Binka: Malaria

  • 8.16: Ehud Zigmond and Daniel Shouval: Viral alcoholic and fatty liver diseases

  • 8.17: David L. Heymann and Vernon J. M. Lee: Emerging and re-emerging infections

  • 8.18: Peter Katona: Bioterrorism

  • 8.19: Elizabeth H. Young and Manjinder S. Sandhu: Genetic epidemiology

  • Section 9: Prevention and control of public health hazards

  • 9.1: Tai Hing Lam and Sai Yin Ho: Tobacco

  • 9.2: Giang Le Minh and Steve Shoptaw: Substance use and misuse: considerations on global public health

  • 9.3: Robin Room: Alcohol

  • 9.4: Corinne Peek-Asa and Adnan A. Hyder: Injury prevention and control: the public health approach

  • 9.5: Rachel Jewkes: Interpersonal violence

  • 9.6: Barry S. Levy: Collective violence: war

  • Section 10: Public health needs of population groups

  • 10.1: Ann Evans and Gavin W. Jones: The changing family

  • 10.2: Diane Cooper: Women, men, and health

  • 10.3: Tyler Vaivada, Amira Khan, Omar Irfan, and Zulfiqar Bhutta: Child health

  • 10.4: George Patton, Peter Azzopardi, Natasha Kaoma, Farnaz Sabet, and Susan Sawyer: Adolescent health

  • 10.5: Jennifer Beard, Nafisa Halim, Salma M. Abdalla, and Sandro Galea: Intersectional and social epidemiology approaches to understanding the Influence of race, ethnicity, and caste on global public health

  • 10.6: Papaarangi Reid, Donna Cormack, Sarah-Jane Paine, Rhys Jones, Elana Curtis, and Matire Harwood: The health of Indigenous peoples

  • 10.7: Anne Kavanagh, Marissa Shields, and Alex Devine: People with disabilities

  • 10.8: Samir K. Sinha and Brittany Ellis: Health of older people

  • 10.9: Catherine R. Bateman Steel and Anthony B. Zwi: Forced migrants and other displaced populations

  • 10.10: Tony G. Butler and Peter W. Schofield: Prisoners: a wicked problem for public...
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2022
Fachbereich: Allgemeine Lexika
Genre: Medizin
Rubrik: Wissenschaften
Medium: Taschenbuch
Inhalt: Gebunden
ISBN-13: 9780198816805
ISBN-10: 0198816804
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Detels, Roger
Redaktion: Detels, Roger
Abdool Karim, Quarraisha
Baum, Fran
Li, Liming
Leyland, Alastair H
Auflage: 7th edition
Hersteller: Oxford University Press, USA
Maße: 284 x 240 x 90 mm
Von/Mit: Roger Detels (u. a.)
Erscheinungsdatum: 19.02.2022
Gewicht: 5,145 kg
preigu-id: 119641445
Über den Autor
Roger Detels is the Distinguished Professor of Epidemiology and Infectious Diseases, Schools of Public Health and Medicine at the University of California.

Quarraisha Abdool Karim is the Associate Scientific Director of CAPRISA, a Professor in Clinical Epidemiology at Columbia University, and Pro Vice-Chancellor (African Health) at the University of Kwazulu-Natal in South Africa.

Fran Baum is the Matthew Flinders Distinguished Professor of Public Health and Director of the Southgate Institute of Health at Flinders University in Australia.

Liming Li is a Professor of Epidemiology at the School of Public Health, Peking University Health Science Center, Beijing

Alastair H Leyland is the Associate Director and Senior Research Scientist at the MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow
Inhaltsverzeichnis
  • Section 1: The development of the discipline of public health

  • 1.1: Roger Detels and Chorh Chuan Tan: The scope and concerns of public health

  • 1.2: Simon Szreter: The history and development of public health in developed countries

  • 1.3: Nathan D. Wong: Epidemiology and prevention of cardiovascular disease

  • 1.4: Stephen Tollman and Jessica Price: Public health priorities in countries undergoing economic transition: the middle-income countries

  • 1.5: Kelley Lee: Globalization

  • Section 2: Determinants of health and disease

  • 2.1: Matthew Fisher, Belinda Townsend, Patrick Harris, Ashley Schram, and Fran Baum: Determinants of health: overview

  • 2.2: Kaitlyn B. McBride and Linda Rosenstock: Politics of public health

  • 2.3: Ronald Labonté, Frances Baum, and David Sanders: Poverty, justice, and health

  • 2.4: Frank J. van Lenthe and Johan P. Mackenbach: Socioeconomic inequalities in health in high-income countries: the facts and the options

  • 2.5: Paulo M. Buss, Romulo Paes-Souza, and Mauricio Barreto: Reducing health inequalities in developing countries

  • 2.6: Veron Ramsuran and Tulio de Oliveira: Genomics and public health

  • 2.7: Thomas Clasen: Water and sanitation

  • 2.8: Roger Shrimpton, David Sanders, and Anne Marie Thow: Food and nutrition

  • 2.9: Alistair Woodward and Alex Macmillan: Climate change and human health

  • 2.10: Lawrence W. Green, Kristin S. Hoeft, and Robert A. Hiatt: Behavioural determinants of health and disease

  • 2.11: Yvonne Inall, Rachel Lamdin Hunter, Stephen Leeder, and Angela Beaton: How access to health care affects population health

  • Section 3: Public health policies, law, and ethics

  • 3.1: Kevin A. Fenton: Leadership in public health

  • 3.2: Nancy Kass, Amy Paul, and Andrew Siegel: Ethical principles and ethical issues in public health

  • 3.3: Carmel Williams, Alison Blaiklock, and Paul Hunt: The right to health supports global public health

  • 3.4: Lawrence O. Gostin: Law and the public's health

  • 3.5: Thein T Htay, Yu Mon Saw, James Levinson, SM Kadri, Ailbhe Helen Brady, Cecilia S. Acquin, and Aung Soe Htet: Health policy in developing countries

  • 3.6: John Powles and Hebe Gouda: Public health policy in developed countries

  • Section 4: Information systems and sources of intelligence

  • 4.1: Tjeerd-Pieter van Staa and Liam Smeeth: Information systems in support of public health in high-income countries

  • 4.2: Zunyou Wu and Jennifer McGoogan: Community diagnosis and health information systems in low- and middle-income countries

  • 4.3: Patrick S Sullivan, Aaron J Siegler, and Lisa Hightow-Weidman: New communication technologies, social media, and public health

  • Section 5: Epidemiological and biostatistical approaches

  • 5.1: Roger Detels: Epidemiology: the foundation of public health

  • 5.2: Manolis Kogevinas and Leda Chatzi: Cross-sectional studies

  • 5.3: Sopon Iamsirithaworn, Panithee Thammawijaya, and Kumnuan Ungchusak: Principles of outbreak investigation

  • 5.4: Noel S. Weiss: Case-control studies

  • 5.5: Alvaro Muñoz and F. Javier Nieto: Cohort studies

  • 5.6: Jennie Popay and Fran Baum: Qualitative research imagination

  • 5.7: Kathy J Baisley, Richard J Hayes, and Lawrence H Moulton: Methodological issues in the design and analysis of cluster randomised trials

  • 5.8: John W. Farquhar and Lawrence W. Green: Community intervention trials in high-income countries

  • 5.9: Peter Craig: Natural and quasi experiments

  • 5.10: Fiona F Stanaway, Naomi Noguchi, Clement Loy, Sharon Reid, and Jonathan C. Craig: Clinical epidemiology

  • 5.11: Sander Greenland and Tyler J. VanderWeele: Validity and bias in epidemiological research

  • 5.12: Katherine J. Hoggatt, Tyler J. VanderWeele, and Sander Greenland: Causation and causal inference

  • 5.13: Nandi Siegfried and Lawrence Mbuagbaw: Systematic reviews and meta-analysis

  • 5.14: Gail Williams: Statistical methods

  • 5.15: Theo Vos and Christopher J.L. Murray: Measuring the health of populations: the Global Burden of Disease study methods

  • 5.16: Alex Welte and Cari van Schalkwyk: Mathematical models of transmission and control of infectious agents

  • 5.17: Nguyen Tran Hien, James W. Buehler, and Ann Marie Kimball: Public health surveillance

  • 5.18: Elizabeth Rose Mayeda, Alexandra M. Binder, and Lindsay C. Kobayashi: Life course epidemiology and analysis

  • Section 6: Social science techniques

  • 6.1: Stella R. Quah: Sociology and psychology in public health

  • 6.2: Richard Parker, Jonathan Garcia, Miguel Muñoz-Laboy, Marni Sommer, and Patrick Wilson: Sexuality and public healh

  • 6.3: Emily Grundy and Michael Murphy: Demography and public health

  • 6.4: Simon Carroll and Marcia Hills: Health promotion, health education, and the public's health

  • 6.5: Rona Campbell and Chris Bonell: Development and evaluation of complex multicomponent interventions in public health

  • 6.6: David Parkin, Stephen Morris, and Nancy Devlin: Economic appraisal in public health care: assessing efficiency and equity

  • 6.7: Alison Buttenheim and Harsha Thirumurthy: Behavioral economics and health

  • 6.8: Zhiyuan Hou and Na He: Governance and management of public health programmes

  • 6.9: Wafaa M. El-Sadr, Judith Wasserheit, Bryan Wiener, Andrea Howard, Catherine Hankins, Patricia J. Culligan, and Katherine Harripersaud: Implementation Science and translational public health

  • Section 7: Environmental and occupational health sciences

  • 7.1: Chien-Jen Chen and San-Lin You: Environmental health methods

  • 7.2: Leeka Kheifets, Adele Green, and Richard Wakeford: Radiation and public health

  • 7.3: David Koh and Wee Hoe Gan: Occupational health

  • 7.4: David Koh and Ro-Ting Lin: Toxicology and environmental risk analysis

  • 7.5: Baruch Fischhoff and Tamar Krishnamurti: Risk perception and communication

  • 7.6: Jason Corburn: Urbanization and health

  • Section 8: Major health problems

  • 8.1: Nathan D. Wong and Wenjun Fan: Epidemiology and prevention of cardiovascular disease

  • 8.2: Zuo-Feng Zhang, Paolo Boffetta, Alfred I. Neugut, and Carlo La Vecchia: Cancer epidemiology and public health

  • 8.3: Craig M. Riley, Jessica Bon, and Alison Morris: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma

  • 8.4: Anna Peeters and Tim Lobstein: Obesity

  • 8.5: Nyssa T. Hadgraft, Neville Owen, and Paddy C. Dempsey: Physical activity and public health

  • 8.6: Farah Naz Khan, Nida Izhar Shaikh, K.M. Venkat Narayan, and Mohammed K. Ali: Diabetes Mellitus

  • 8.7: Danuta Wasserman and Kristian Wahlbeck: Public mental health and suicide

  • 8.8: Amira S. Mohamed and Peter G. Robinson: Dental public health

  • 8.9: Lope H. Barrero: Musculoskeletal disorders

  • 8.10: Walter A. Kukull, Kumeren Govender, and James Bowen: Neurological diseases, epidemiology, and public health

  • 8.11: Davidson H. Hamer, Amira Khan, and Zulfiqar A. Bhutta: Infectious diseases and prions

  • 8.12: N. Kojima and J.D. Klausner: Sexually transmitted infections

  • 8.13: Quarraisha Abdool Karim, Urisha Singh, Cheryl Baxter, and Salim S. Abdool Karim: Acquired Immuno-Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS)

  • 8.14: Roxana Rustomjee: Tuberculosis

  • 8.15: Frank Baiden, Keziah L. Malm, and Fred Binka: Malaria

  • 8.16: Ehud Zigmond and Daniel Shouval: Viral alcoholic and fatty liver diseases

  • 8.17: David L. Heymann and Vernon J. M. Lee: Emerging and re-emerging infections

  • 8.18: Peter Katona: Bioterrorism

  • 8.19: Elizabeth H. Young and Manjinder S. Sandhu: Genetic epidemiology

  • Section 9: Prevention and control of public health hazards

  • 9.1: Tai Hing Lam and Sai Yin Ho: Tobacco

  • 9.2: Giang Le Minh and Steve Shoptaw: Substance use and misuse: considerations on global public health

  • 9.3: Robin Room: Alcohol

  • 9.4: Corinne Peek-Asa and Adnan A. Hyder: Injury prevention and control: the public health approach

  • 9.5: Rachel Jewkes: Interpersonal violence

  • 9.6: Barry S. Levy: Collective violence: war

  • Section 10: Public health needs of population groups

  • 10.1: Ann Evans and Gavin W. Jones: The changing family

  • 10.2: Diane Cooper: Women, men, and health

  • 10.3: Tyler Vaivada, Amira Khan, Omar Irfan, and Zulfiqar Bhutta: Child health

  • 10.4: George Patton, Peter Azzopardi, Natasha Kaoma, Farnaz Sabet, and Susan Sawyer: Adolescent health

  • 10.5: Jennifer Beard, Nafisa Halim, Salma M. Abdalla, and Sandro Galea: Intersectional and social epidemiology approaches to understanding the Influence of race, ethnicity, and caste on global public health

  • 10.6: Papaarangi Reid, Donna Cormack, Sarah-Jane Paine, Rhys Jones, Elana Curtis, and Matire Harwood: The health of Indigenous peoples

  • 10.7: Anne Kavanagh, Marissa Shields, and Alex Devine: People with disabilities

  • 10.8: Samir K. Sinha and Brittany Ellis: Health of older people

  • 10.9: Catherine R. Bateman Steel and Anthony B. Zwi: Forced migrants and other displaced populations

  • 10.10: Tony G. Butler and Peter W. Schofield: Prisoners: a wicked problem for public...
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2022
Fachbereich: Allgemeine Lexika
Genre: Medizin
Rubrik: Wissenschaften
Medium: Taschenbuch
Inhalt: Gebunden
ISBN-13: 9780198816805
ISBN-10: 0198816804
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Detels, Roger
Redaktion: Detels, Roger
Abdool Karim, Quarraisha
Baum, Fran
Li, Liming
Leyland, Alastair H
Auflage: 7th edition
Hersteller: Oxford University Press, USA
Maße: 284 x 240 x 90 mm
Von/Mit: Roger Detels (u. a.)
Erscheinungsdatum: 19.02.2022
Gewicht: 5,145 kg
preigu-id: 119641445
Warnhinweis

Ähnliche Produkte

Ähnliche Produkte