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Showing 1 to 15 of 24 results Save | Export
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Kim, Saerom; Kim, Jin-Hwan; Park, Yukyung; Kim, Sun; Kim, Chang-yup – Health Education & Behavior, 2020
This study aims to analyze South Korea's experience during the COVID-19 outbreak through a gendered lens. We briefly introduce the COVID-19 outbreak in Korea, scrutinize gendered vulnerability in contracting the virus, and then analyze the gendered aspects of the pandemic response in two phases: quarantine policy and mitigation policy. The authors…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Gender Differences, Public Health, Health Behavior
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Psaki, Stephanie R.; Mensch, Barbara S.; Chuang, Erica K.; Melnikas, Andrea J. – Population Council, 2019
Despite enormous progress in expanding school enrollment globally, improvements in health have not always followed, raising important questions: Does education, in fact, enable women, men and their families to be healthier? And if so, how? To fill this gap in knowledge, the GIRL Center conducted a systematic review of the evidence for the effects…
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Role of Education, Educational Attainment, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS)
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Smith, Cristine A.; Stone, Rebecca Paulson; Kahando, Sarah – International Review of Education, 2012
Delaying girls' early marriage is a critical public health and education goal in developing countries, in which their own or their mothers' education may play an important role. This paper reviews the existing evidence of any relationship between girls' schooling or women's literacy education and delayed marriage for themselves or their daughters.…
Descriptors: Evidence, Literacy Education, Mothers, Daughters
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Redley, Marcus; Banks, Carys; Foody, Karen; Holland, Anthony – Disability & Society, 2012
Healthcare for men and women with learning disabilities (known internationally as intellectual disabilities) has risen up the political agenda in the United Kingdom, propelled by a report from the charity Mencap. This report has resulted in renewed efforts, set out in "Valuing People Now", to ensure that people with learning disabilities…
Descriptors: Females, Foreign Countries, Males, Mental Retardation
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Stote, Karen – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2012
This paper considers the coercive sterilization of Aboriginal women in legislated and non-legislated form in Canada. I provide an historical and materialist critique of coercive sterilization. I argue for coercive sterilization to be understood as one of many policies employed to undermine Aboriginal women, to separate Aboriginal peoples from…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Females, Contraception
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Shoveller, Jean; Chabot, Cathy; Johnson, Joy L.; Prkachin, Ken – Youth & Society, 2011
Despite a general decline, early-age motherhood continues to manifest disproportionately among young women living in rural/remote Canada. Although public health interventions exist to ameliorate the negative impacts, key determinants of young mothers' well-being exist in sectors outside of health. Moreover, there is no clear understanding of how…
Descriptors: Mothers, Public Health, Ethnography, Early Parenthood
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Wolitzky-Taylor, Kate B.; Resnick, Heidi S.; McCauley, Jenna L.; Amstadter, Ananda B.; Kilpatrick, Dean G.; Ruggiero, Kenneth J. – Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 2011
Rape affects one in seven women nationwide. Historically, most rape victims do not report rape to law enforcement. Research is needed to identify barriers to reporting and correlates of reporting to guide policy recommendations that address such barriers. We investigated the prevalence of reporting rape among a national sample of women (N = 3,001)…
Descriptors: Rape, Females, Incidence, Public Health
Fox, Jonathan Franklin – ProQuest LLC, 2010
My dissertation examines the effectiveness of three policy choices in meeting socio-economic goals. The first analyzes the impact of public health education and poverty relief on child mortality in the early twentieth century, when infant and child mortality rates in the United States were startlingly high. During the 1920s, the rates dropped…
Descriptors: Health Education, Poverty, Program Evaluation, Outcomes of Education
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Kandakai, Tina L.; Smith, Leonie C. R. – American Journal of Health Behavior, 2007
Objective: To explore the impact of teen-adult sexual relationships as a public health threat and the effectiveness of statutory rape laws in protecting adolescent children. Methods: A comprehensive review of current literature surrounding child abuse, teen pregnancy, and statutory rape was conducted. Results: Of one million teen girls who become…
Descriptors: Empowerment, Rape, Child Abuse, Public Health
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Evans, John; Davies, Brian; Rich, Emma – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2008
This paper examines the inexorable rise of "health" as regulative discourse, highlighting its class and cultural dimensions. With reference to the policy content of recent obesity reports, analysis suggests that contemporary concerns around obesity are but a modern variant of earlier eighteenth and nineteenth century child saving crusades whose…
Descriptors: Working Class, Obesity, Females, Public Health
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Buki, Lydia P. – Counseling Psychologist, 2007
This reaction to the Major Contribution presents a conceptualization of health disparities as another form of oppression of marginalized populations in our society. Consistent with this view, health disparities are then situated within a larger, national context, showing that counseling psychologists' involvement is an integral part of a…
Descriptors: Public Policy, Psychologists, Counseling Psychology, Public Health
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Lee, David S.; Guy, Lydia; Perry, Brad; Sniffen, Chad Keoni; Mixson, Stacy Alamo – Prevention Researcher, 2007
This article reviews approaches for developing comprehensive strategies that stop violence before initial perpetration occurs. Using feminist theory and public health perspectives as its foundation, the use of educational sessions, community mobilization, social norms, social marketing, and policy work are all explored. (Contains 1 table.)
Descriptors: Social Theories, Feminism, Violence, Sexual Harassment
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Archer, David – Convergence, 2006
There are nearly one billion adults who cannot read and write, according to UNESCO statistics. Most of these are people living in extreme poverty, almost two-thirds are women, and nearly one in five is a young person aged between 15 and 24. The Global Campaign for Education (GCE) believes that there are five compelling practical reasons for…
Descriptors: Adult Literacy, Social Change, Foreign Countries, Public Health
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Kilpatrick, Dean G. – Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 2004
Violence against women (VAW) is a prevalent problem with substantial physical and mental health consequences throughout the world, and sound public policy is dependent on having good measures of VAW. This article (a) describes and contrasts criminal justice and public health approaches toward defining VAW, (b) identifies major controversies…
Descriptors: Public Policy, Females, Violence, Sexual Abuse
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Bulman, Donna; Coben, Diana; Nguyen, Van Anh – Compare A Journal of Comparative Education, 2004
This paper describes current trends in the HIV/AIDS epidemic. It looks at issues and strategies involved in educating women about HIV/AIDS in the context of the global pandemic, focusing particularly on Canada and Vietnam. These strategies are essential steps in preventing the spread of HIV and in caring for those who have already developed AIDS.…
Descriptors: Gender Discrimination, Foreign Countries, Public Policy, Females
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