4361. Defining and conceptualising the commercial determinants of health.
作者: Anna B Gilmore.;Alice Fabbri.;Fran Baum.;Adam Bertscher.;Krista Bondy.;Ha-Joon Chang.;Sandro Demaio.;Agnes Erzse.;Nicholas Freudenberg.;Sharon Friel.;Karen J Hofman.;Paula Johns.;Safura Abdool Karim.;Jennifer Lacy-Nichols.;Camila Maranha Paes de Carvalho.;Robert Marten.;Martin McKee.;Mark Petticrew.;Lindsay Robertson.;Viroj Tangcharoensathien.;Anne Marie Thow.
来源: Lancet. 2023年401卷10383期1194-1213页
Although commercial entities can contribute positively to health and society there is growing evidence that the products and practices of some commercial actors-notably the largest transnational corporations-are responsible for escalating rates of avoidable ill health, planetary damage, and social and health inequity; these problems are increasingly referred to as the commercial determinants of health. The climate emergency, the non-communicable disease epidemic, and that just four industry sectors (ie, tobacco, ultra-processed food, fossil fuel, and alcohol) already account for at least a third of global deaths illustrate the scale and huge economic cost of the problem. This paper, the first in a Series on the commercial determinants of health, explains how the shift towards market fundamentalism and increasingly powerful transnational corporations has created a pathological system in which commercial actors are increasingly enabled to cause harm and externalise the costs of doing so. Consequently, as harms to human and planetary health increase, commercial sector wealth and power increase, whereas the countervailing forces having to meet these costs (notably individuals, governments, and civil society organisations) become correspondingly impoverished and disempowered or captured by commercial interests. This power imbalance leads to policy inertia; although many policy solutions are available, they are not being implemented. Health harms are escalating, leaving health-care systems increasingly unable to cope. Governments can and must act to improve, rather than continue to threaten, the wellbeing of future generations, development, and economic growth.
4363. Assessing COVID-19 pandemic policies and behaviours and their economic and educational trade-offs across US states from Jan 1, 2020, to July 31, 2022: an observational analysis.
作者: Thomas J Bollyky.;Emma Castro.;Aleksandr Y Aravkin.;Kayleigh Bhangdia.;Jeremy Dalos.;Erin N Hulland.;Samantha Kiernan.;Amy Lastuka.;Theresa A McHugh.;Samuel M Ostroff.;Peng Zheng.;Hamza Tariq Chaudhry.;Elle Ruggiero.;Isabella Turilli.;Christopher Adolph.;Joanne O Amlag.;Bree Bang-Jensen.;Ryan M Barber.;Austin Carter.;Cassidy Chang.;Rebecca M Cogen.;James K Collins.;Xiaochen Dai.;William James Dangel.;Carolyn Dapper.;Amanda Deen.;Alexandra Eastus.;Megan Erickson.;Tatiana Fedosseeva.;Abraham D Flaxman.;Nancy Fullman.;John R Giles.;Gaorui Guo.;Simon I Hay.;Jiawei He.;Monika Helak.;Bethany M Huntley.;Vincent C Iannucci.;Kasey E Kinzel.;Kate E LeGrand.;Beatrice Magistro.;Ali H Mokdad.;Hasan Nassereldine.;Yaz Ozten.;Maja Pasovic.;David M Pigott.;Robert C Reiner.;Grace Reinke.;Austin E Schumacher.;Elizabeth Serieux.;Emma E Spurlock.;Christopher E Troeger.;Anh Truc Vo.;Theo Vos.;Rebecca Walcott.;Shafagh Yazdani.;Christopher J L Murray.;Joseph L Dieleman.
来源: Lancet. 2023年401卷10385期1341-1360页
The USA struggled in responding to the COVID-19 pandemic, but not all states struggled equally. Identifying the factors associated with cross-state variation in infection and mortality rates could help to improve responses to this and future pandemics. We sought to answer five key policy-relevant questions regarding the following: 1) what roles social, economic, and racial inequities had in interstate variation in COVID-19 outcomes; 2) whether states with greater health-care and public health capacity had better outcomes; 3) how politics influenced the results; 4) whether states that imposed more policy mandates and sustained them longer had better outcomes; and 5) whether there were trade-offs between a state having fewer cumulative SARS-CoV-2 infections and total COVID-19 deaths and its economic and educational outcomes.
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