Edition 27 – Identification of “Hot Spots” of COVID-19 in the United States (January 2020-January 2021)
Identification of “Hot Spots” of COVID-19 in the United States (January 2020-January 2021) By Jessica Liu, MPH, SV Subramanian, PhD, Alan C Geller, MPH, RN Citation Liu J, Subramanian S, Geller A. Identification of “hot spots” of COVID-19 in the United States (January 2020-January 2021). Harvard Public Health Review. 2021; 27. DOI:10.54111/0001/aa2 Identification of “Hot […]
Edition 30 – Purpose Built Communities to Promote Health Equity and Address the Impacts of Racialized Residential Segregation
Purpose Built Communities to Promote Health Equity and Address the Impacts of Racialized Residential Segregation By Veronica L. Handunge Citation Handunge V. Purpose built communities to promote health equity and address the impacts of racialized residential segregation. HPHR. 2021; 30. DOI:10.54111/0001/DD12 Purpose Built Communities to Promote Health Equity and Address the Impacts of Racialized Residential […]
Lindsay Rosenfeld, ScD, ScM explains why health literacy is health equity (#4)
Let’s stop focusing on system users (e.g. patients, families, students) as the problem and start focusing on the ways we can create a usable system.
Lindsay Rosenfeld, ScD, ScM explains why engaging health equity requires you to be a constant student (#3)
How do we do Health Equity? Be a constant student.
Stuti Chakraborty discusses the way forward for Stroke in Low-and Low-and-Middle-Income Countries
Stroke Reimagined By Stuti Chakraborty A mobile stroke unit in India Stroke and Low-and Low-and-Middle-Income Countries: The Way Forward The World Bank, for the current fiscal year of 2022, defines low-income economies as those with a GNI (Gross National Income) per capita of $1,045 or less in 2020 and lower middle-income economies as those with […]
Edition 31 – Part II: Vaccine Hesitancy and Misinformation
Health misinformation has far reaching and potentially damaging impacts on behavior, including vaccine hesitancy.
Edition 30 – Community Health Assessment of Muslim Women at an East Harlem Islamic Center
Community Health Assessment of Muslim Women at an East Harlem Islamic Center By Farhana Begum, Brittany Dodson, MSPH, and Anitha Srinivasan, MD MPH Citation Begum F, Dodson B, Srinivasan A. Community health assessment of Muslim women at an East Harlem Islamic Center. HPHR. 2021; 30. DOI:10.54111/0001/DD13 Community Health Assessment of Muslim Women at an East […]
Edition 30 – Structural Colorism: Illuminating the Shadow of Structural Racism and its Malcontents
Structural Colorism: Illuminating the Shadow of Structural Racism and its Malcontents By Dr. Candice Carpenter Citation Carpenter C. Structural colorism: Illuminating the shadow of structural racism and its malcontents. HPHR. 2021; 30. DOI:10.54111/0001/DD15 Structural Colorism: Illuminating the Shadow of Structural Racism and its Malcontents If it was so honorable and glorious to be black, why […]
Edition 30 – Ensuring Equitable Vaccine Distribution for COVID-19 in Wake County, North Carolina
Ensuring Equitable Vaccine Distribution for COVID-19 in Wake County, North Carolina By Paige Bennett, Lauren M. Brown, Lechelle Wilson Wardell, Marina Smelyanskaya Watch a brief overview of their article. Citation Bennett P, Brown L, Wardell L, Smelyanskaya M. Ensuring equitable vaccine distribution for COVID-19 in Wake County, North Carolina. HPHR. 2021; 30. DOI:10.54111/0001/DD16 Ensuring Equitable […]
Edition 31 – Race and Disaster Relief
Race and Disaster Relief By Shannon Chun Citation Chun S. Race and disaster relief. HPHR. 2021; 30. DOI:10.54111/0001/EE5 Race and Disaster Relief Introduction Natural disasters represent common, yet often ignored, contributors to wealth inequality. With the ongoing global threat of climate change, floods, wildfires, and hurricanes increasingly have become regular phenomena that inevitably overwhelm local […]