Public Health Resource Center - All Articles

Public Health - All Articles

Public health focuses on social methods of protecting and promoting the health of communities through education, policy, safety standards, vaccination, and research. From lawmakers to social workers to restaurant inspectors to epidemiologists, a broad spectrum of professionals aim to prevent sickness at a community level. Public health initiatives include promoting healthy behaviors, developing school nutrition programs, and working to address the health impacts of gun violence, climate change, and economic disparities.

Social factors like job and food insecurity, working conditions, income, education, and access to affordable healthcare can influence public health outcomes.

FAQ

What are key areas of public health?

Epidemiology, product safety, biostatistics, environmental health (including sanitation, pollution, natural disasters, and climate change), hazard prevention in public and the workplace, insurance and financial elements of health, and health policy are key areas of public health.

Public health reduces the spread of disease through vaccination, improved hygiene in public spaces, large-scale policy decisions, and health education campaigns. It also aims to improve access to healthcare for all populations and reduce environmental causes of disease.

Epidemiology studies how common diseases are in specific communities and why. It also tracks infectious diseases, the causes of chronic disease, environmental health factors, and injury cause and prevention. The information gathered during epidemiological research drives public policy.

Pollution, sanitation, and access to clean water affect community health. Preparing for and communicating around natural disasters, education about hygiene, and pest control all relate to environmental health and influence health outcomes.

A health disparity means different populations have different health outcomes or face different healthcare experiences. Factors may include geographical location, biases in research, public policy, level of insurance coverage, and financial access to high-quality care.

Everyday Health’s team of board-certified physicians and health professionals contribute to the creation and review of content, ensuring that the information is useful, up to date, and accurate.
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Resources
  1. What Is Public Health? American Public Health Association.
  2. Social Determinants of Health. World Health Organization.

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