Politics, Hierarchy, and Public Health

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2016 presidential election
2016 US presidential election
A01=Deborah Wallace
A01=Rodrick Wallace
accelerated aging
Author_Deborah Wallace
Author_Rodrick Wallace
Category=CB
Category=GTP
Category=KCL
Category=KFCP
Category=KNV
Cerebrovascular Disease
CHD
CHD Mortality
Chronic
civil rights
Clinton States
Cold War economics
Compressed Mortality Files
COPD
COPD Mortality
Coronary Heart Disease Mortality
Diabetes Mortality
dW
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
geographic concentration of mortalities and illness
Gonorrhea Incidence
health inequalities
Health Marker
Higher Educational Attainment
labour union decline
Low Weight Birth
Low Weight Birth Incidence
Military Expenditure
mortality statistics
Multivariate Regression
Obesity Prevalence
post-industrial Western society
Post-war
public health
public health disparities in US states
SE System
Soc Sci
social epidemiology
socioeconomic determinants
socioeconomic vs. health connections
Trump States
Trump- and Clinton-voting states
unequal mortality rates
Union Participation
US public health system
weathering
Younger Age Ranges

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367727987
  • Weight: 231g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Steep socioeconomic hierarchy in post-industrial Western society threatens public health because of the physiological consequences of material and psychosocial insecurities and deprivations. Following on from their previous books, the authors continue their exploration of the geography of early mortality from age-related chronic conditions, of risk behaviors and their health outcomes, and of infant and child mortality, all due to rigid hierarchy. They divide the 50 states into those that gave their electoral college votes to Trump and those that gave theirs to Clinton in the 2016 presidential election and compare the two sets for socioeconomic and public health profiles. They deliberately apply only simple standard statistical methods in the public health analyses: t-test, Mann-Whitney test, bivariate regression, and backward stepwise multivariate regression. The book assumes familiarity with basic statistics.

The authors argue that the unequal power relations that result in eroding public health in the nation and, in particular, in the Trump-voting states, largely cascade from the collapse of American industry, and they analyze the Cold War roots of that collapse. In two largely independent chapters on economics, they explore both the suppression of countervailing forces, such as organized labor, and the diversion of technical resources to the military as essential foundations to the population-level suffering that expressed itself in the 2016 presidential election.

This interdisciplinary book has several primary audiences: creators of public policies, such as legislators and governmental staff, public health professionals and social epidemiologists, economists, labor union professionals, civil rights advocates, political scientists, historians, and students of these disciplines from public health through the social sciences.

Deborah Wallace is an ecologist who pioneered the transfer of ecosystem analytical approaches to social epidemiology and health inequality.

Rodrick Wallace is a research scientist in epidemiology at the New York State Psychiatric Institute. He is well-known for modeling cognitive processes ranging from cellular-level immunity up to national economies and to decision-making in large institutions.

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