Addiction research

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The international diffusion of European alcohol research The international diffusion of European alcohol research

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Date added: 02/15/2013
Date modified: 02/15/2013
Filesize: 234.05 kB
Downloads: 1753

Authors: Noemi Robles, Silvia Matrai, Vanesa Carral Bielsa, Joan Colom, Antoni Gual

Europe presents the highest rates of alcohol consumption per inhabitant, with an impact exceeding 6% of the DALYs lost. However, European researchers claim that most of the research in the alcohol field is conducted outside Europe. In order to assess this claim, a review of international indexed publications on alcohol marketing and availability, two cornerstones of alcohol public health policy, was performed.

The Independent: "Smoked out: tobacco giant's war on science" The Independent: "Smoked out: tobacco giant's war on science"

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Date added: 11/12/2011
Date modified: 01/28/2013
Filesize: 792.09 kB
Downloads: 3916

Author: Steve Connor (The Independent)

Research by Sterling University into young people and smoking is being demanded by tobacco company Philip Morris under UK 'Freedom of Information' legislation.

The Increased Risk of Colon Cancer Due to Cigarette Smoking May Be Greater in Women than Men The Increased Risk of Colon Cancer Due to Cigarette Smoking May Be Greater in Women than Men

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Date added: 05/28/2013
Date modified: 05/28/2013
Filesize: Unknown
Downloads: 2109

Smoking is a recently established risk factor for colon cancer. This study wants to explore the hypothesis that women may be more susceptible to smoking-attributed colon cancer than men as one of the possible explanations for the high colon cancer risk of Norwegian women.

The establishment of alcohol misuse as an object of empirical inquiry ... The establishment of alcohol misuse as an object of empirical inquiry ...

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Date added: 02/25/2013
Date modified: 02/25/2013
Filesize: 265.07 kB
Downloads: 2174

Full title: Consequences and behaviour problematised: The establishment of alcohol misuse as an object of empirical inquiry in late 18th- and early 19th-century European medicine

Author: Ruuska Arto (University of Helsinki)

In his article, Arto Ruuska discusses European medical thought on alcohol in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Earlier historiography has identified the era as the starting point of individualising disease concept of alcohol addiction. Ruuska argues that the era’s proper legacy is rather the establishment of alcohol-related phenomena as objects of empirical inquiry, and – contrary to the claims made in the historiography of the ‘disease concept of addiction’ – the articulation of socio-cultural embeddedness of alcohol-related pathologies.

The equity action spectrum: taking a comprehensive approach The equity action spectrum: taking a comprehensive approach

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Date added: 05/09/2014
Date modified: 05/09/2014
Filesize: 400.23 kB
Downloads: 1870

Written by: Margaret Whitehead, Sue Povall, Belinda Loring

This guidance aims to support European policy-makers to improve the design and implementation of policies to reduce inequities in health. It brings together current evidence on how to develop comprehensive policy action plans to identify and address social determinants of health inequities. While great improvements have been made in health across the WHO European Region, there are still striking contrasts in the standards of health enjoyed by different countries within the Region and by different population groups within these countries. Reducing health inequities and improving governance for health and health equity are key strategic objectives of Health 2020 – the European policy framework for health and well-being endorsed by the 53 Member States of the WHO European Region in 2012. This guide seeks to assist European policy-makers in contributing to achieving the objectives of Health 2020 in a practical way. It draws on key evidence, including from the WHO Regional Office for Europe’s Review of social determinants and the health divide in the WHO European Region. It also provides a framework that policy-makers at national, regional and local levels can apply to their own unique context, in order to consider the processes by which inequities might occur, and to suggest policy interventions that may be helpful in addressing these factors.