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      Comparison of Public Health Investments of Various Countries Amid a Need for Greater Transparency: A Narrative Review

      review-article
      1 , , 1 , 1
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      Cureus
      Cureus
      programs, disease, interventions, public health, economic investments, public health investments

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          Abstract

          A robust health system demands investments in public health and healthcare as they aid in closing the health protection gap. They are primarily responsible for longer life expectancies, disease prevention, and protection. Loopholes in the public health system were formed due to a lack of transparency and have only worsened throughout COVID-19. Spending more on public health is associated with fewer deaths, fewer food-borne illnesses, better sanitation, food safety, clean air and water, increased immunizations to stave against infectious diseases, and a decline in low birth weight. A comprehensive literature and data search was conducted using web-based search engines like PubMed, National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI), Google Scholar, Science Direct, and the New England Journal of Medicine. The review study standpoints healthcare spending, out-of-pocket expenditures, and other monetary use in various low-to-high-income countries, and the results are graphically represented. Countries with a strong public health system provide all the necessary aid to protect their citizens. They have cost-effective, readily available resources with fewer out-of-pocket expenditures (OOPs), government schemes, and health insurance to help their people. During our research, it was found how little the Indian government spends on healthcare as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) as compared to 'thought-to-be' poor countries like Bhutan.

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          Socioeconomic Status and Access to Healthcare: Interrelated Drivers for Healthy Aging

          The rapid growth of the global aging population has raised attention to the health and healthcare needs of older adults. The purpose of this mini-review is to: (1) elucidate the complex factors affecting the relationship between chronological age, socio-economic status (SES), access to care, and healthy aging using a SES-focused framework; (2) present examples of interventions from across the globe; and (3) offer recommendations for research-guided action to remediate the trend of older age being associated with lower SES, lack of access to care, and poorer health outcomes. Evidence supports a relationship between SES and healthcare access as well as healthcare access and health outcomes for older adults. Because financial resources are proportional to health status, efforts are needed to support older adults and the burdened healthcare system with financial resources. This can be most effective with grassroots approaches and interventions to improve SES among older adults and through data-driven policy and systems change.
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            Does preventive care save money? Health economics and the presidential candidates.

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              Health disparities based on socioeconomic inequities: implications for urban health care.

              Health is unevenly distributed across socioeconomic status. Persons of lower income, education, or occupational status experience worse health and die earlier than do their better-off counterparts. This article discusses these disparities in the context of urban medical practice. The article begins with a discussion of the complex relationship among socioeconomic status, race, and health in the United States. It highlights the effects of institutional, individual, and internalized racism on the health of African Americans, including the insidious consequences of residential segregation and concentrated poverty. Next, the article reviews health disparities based on socioeconomic status across the life cycle, beginning in fetal health and ending with disparities among the elderly. Potential explanations for these socioeconomic-based disparities are addressed, including reverse causality (e.g., being poor causes lower socioeconomic status) and confounding by genetic factors. The article underscores social causation as the primary explanation for health disparities and highlights the cumulative effects of social disadvantage across stages of the life cycle and across environments (e.g., fetal, family, educational, occupational, and neighborhood). The article concludes with a discussion of the implications of health disparities for the practice of urban medicine, including the role that concentration of disadvantage plays among patients and practice sites and the need for quality improvement to mitigate these disparities.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cureus
                Cureus
                2168-8184
                Cureus
                Cureus (Palo Alto (CA) )
                2168-8184
                28 September 2022
                September 2022
                : 14
                : 9
                : e29687
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Community Medicine, School of Epidemiology and Public Health, Jawaharlal Nehru Medical College, Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Sciences, Wardha, IND
                Author notes
                Article
                10.7759/cureus.29687
                9616554
                36320949
                702ca0f4-6a4e-4f71-a232-9ac4af8312ad
                Copyright © 2022, Hasan et al.

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 4 September 2022
                : 28 September 2022
                Categories
                Preventive Medicine
                Public Health
                Epidemiology/Public Health

                programs,disease,interventions,public health,economic investments,public health investments

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