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Volume 351:1137-1142 September 9, 2004 Number 11
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Class — The Ignored Determinant of the Nation's Health
Stephen L. Isaacs, J.D., and Steven A. Schroeder, M.D.

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The health of the American public has never been better. Infectious diseases that caused terror in families less than 100 years ago are now largely under control. With the important exception of AIDS and occasional outbreaks of new diseases such as the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) or of old ones such as tuberculosis, infectious diseases no longer constitute much of a public health threat. Mortality rates from heart disease and stroke — two of the nation's three major killers — have plummeted. It is no wonder that a 2003 Institute of Medicine report concluded that Americans today, as compared . . . [Full Text of this Article]

Class, Race, and Health

Policy Implications

Collecting Better Data on Class

Understanding How Class Influences Health

Advancing Social and Economic Policies That Will Improve Health

Conclusions


Source Information

From the Center for Health and Social Policy (S.L.I.) and the University of California (S.A.S.) — both in San Francisco.

Address reprint requests to Mr. Isaacs at the Center for Health and Social Policy, 847 25th Ave., San Francisco, CA 94121.


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