Quarterly Topic

Population Health

Content Type:

  • Quarterly Article

    The Future of Road Safety: Challenges and Opportunities

    April 2023 Johnathon P. Ehsani Jeffrey P. Michael Ellen J. MacKenzie

    As Elizabeth Milbank Anderson was establishing the foundation for the Milbank Memorial Fund in the beginning of the twentieth century, Henry Ford was… More

  • Quarterly Article

    The Role of Primary Care in Improving Population Health

    April 2023 Kurt C. Stange William L. Miller Rebecca S. Etz

    How primary care might influence population health by serving as a force for integration across the often fragmented systems. More

  • Quarterly Article

    Transforming Public Health Data Systems to Advance the Population’s Health

    April 2023 Kushal T. Kadakia Karen B. DeSalvo

    As the public health sector begins an unprecedented data modernization effort, scholars and policymakers should ensure ongoing reforms are aligned with the five components of an ideal public health data system: outcomes and equity oriented, actionable, interoperable, collaborative, and grounded in a robust public health system. More

  • Quarterly Article

    Obesity as a Main Threat to Future Improvements in Population Health: Policy Opportunities and Challenges

    April 2023 Mary Louise Gilburg

    The most recent figures for the United States are startling (even for an obesity researcher): 42% of US adults were classified as being obese in 2017. More

  • Quarterly Article

    Policing and Population Health: Past, Present, and Future

    April 2023 Hedwig Lee Savannah Larimore Michael Esposito

    Emerging scholarship has situated policing as an undeniable social determinant of health and wellbeing in the United States. Still, progress in understanding the precise role that law enforcement plays in the production of population health has been slowed by significant, long-standing data limitations. More

  • Quarterly Article

    Without Affordable, Accessible, and Adequate Housing, Health Has No Foundation

    April 2023 Roshanak Mehdipanah

    This Perspective demonstrates that housing insecurity—which encompasses the dimensions of housing unaffordability, inaccessibility, and inadequacy—is a major public health issue with strong ramifications affecting households, neighborhoods, and cities. More

  • Quarterly Article

    Making Communities More Visible: Equity-Centered Data to Achieve Health Equity

    April 2023 Ninez A. Ponce Riti Shimkhada Paris B. Adkins-Jackson

    In this commentary, we focus on data equity in racialized and minoritized groups by commenting on the institutional commitments, notably community-partnered initiatives put forth as priorities by the Biden Administration in 2021. More

  • Quarterly Article

    The Workforce Needed to Address Population Health

    April 2023 Bianca K. Frogner Davis Patterson Susan M. Skillman

    This article considers the actions needed to recruit and retain a diverse population health workforce that meets population needs, and the policies needed to support this workforce to successfully address population health. More

  • Quarterly Article

    Abortion Policy in the United States: The New Legal Landscape and Its Threats to Health and Socioeconomic Well-Being

    April 2023 Paula M. Lantz Katherine Michelmore Michelle H. Moniz Okeoma Mmeje William G. Axinn Kayte Spector-Bagdady

    The Dobbs decision reversed a nearly 50-year precedent of constitutionally protected federal access to abortion nationwide, relegating its legal oversight back to individual states and territories. In the absence of a constitutionally protected right to abortion care, states are now free to set strict legal parameters around access to abortion.3 More

  • Quarterly Article

    The Perils of Medicalization for Population Health and Health Equity

    April 2023 Paula M. Lantz Daniel S. Goldberg Sarah E. Gollust

    Increased recognition of the negative consequences of a medicalized view of health is essential, with a focus on education and training of clinicians and health care managers, journalists, and policymakers. More