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1

Council, North Dakota State Health. State health plan. Bismarck, ND: State Dept. of Health and Consolidated Laboratories, 1990.

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2

Council, New York Statewide Health Coordinating. State health plan. [Albany: New York Statewide Health Coordinating Council, 1986.

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3

Hawaii. Department of Health. Report to the twentieth Legislature, State of Hawaii, 2000 on act 192, SLH 1999 requesting the Department of Health to conduct soil sample surveys as part of an epidemiologic investigation. Hawaii: The Department, 1999.

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4

Maine. Governor. Office of Health Policy & Finance. Maine's state health plan. [Augusta, Me.]: Governor's Office of Health Policy & Finance, 2004.

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5

New York (State). Dept. of Health. Division of Planning, Policy, and Resource Development., ed. State health plan, 1986. [Albany]: The Council, 1987.

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6

Eastern Health and Social Services Board, Northern Ireland. Area Department of Community Medicine. State of children's health. [Belfast]: [EHSSB], 1989.

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7

Services, Iowa Maternal and Child Health. State plan. Iowa City, Iowa: University Hospital School, University of Iowa, 1992.

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8

Hawaii. Maternal and Child Health Branch. Report to the Twenty-First Legislature, State of Hawaii, 2002: In compliance with Act 216, SLH 1997, relating to fees collected by the Department of Health for the Domestic Violence Prevention Special Fund. Honolulu, Hawaii: Dept. of Health, 2001.

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9

Ohio. Statewide Health Coordinating Council. The Ohio state health plan: Family health component. [Columbus, Ohio]: The Council, 1985.

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10

Phillips, Luci. Washington State rural health databook. Olympia, Wash: Washington State Dept. of Health, 1997.

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11

Ladenheim, Kala. State health care reform legislation. [Washington, D.C.]: Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress, 1993.

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12

Ali, Almas. State of health in Bihar. New Delhi: Population Foundation of India, 2007.

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13

Willman, John. A better state of health. London: Profile Books, 1998.

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14

Puerto Rico. Dept. of Health. Office of Planning, Research, and Development. State health plan, 1985-1990. [San Juan?]: The Office, 1990.

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15

Patel, Vikram. The state of Goa's health. Edited by Sangath Society for Child Development and Family Guidance (Goa, India). Goa: Sangath Society for Child Development and Family Guidance, 2001.

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16

Gold, Steven David. Health spending and state budgets. Albany, N.Y: The Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government, State University of New York, 1994.

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17

Service, Health Policy Tracking. Major state health care policies: Fifty state profiles, 1996. 5th ed. Washington, D.C: Health Policy Tracking Service, 1997.

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18

Service, Health Policy Tracking. Major state health care policies: Fifty state profiles, 1997. 6th ed. Washington, D.C: Health Policy Tracking Service, 1998.

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19

King, Martha P. State roles in health: A snapshot for state legislatures. Denver, Colo: National Conference of State Legislatures, 2002.

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20

Council, Nevada State Health Coordinating. Nevada State Health Plan, 1985-1989: Adopted by the Nevada State Health Coordinating Council. Carson City, Nev: Nevada State Dept. of Human Resources, 1985.

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21

Nevada State Health Coordinating Council. Nevada State health plan, 1988-1992: Adopted by the Nevada State Health Coordinating Council. Carson City, Nev: Nevada State Dept. of Human Resources, Division of Health Resources and Cost Review, 1988.

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22

Washington (State). Committee on Health Disparities. Final report: State Board of Health priority : health disparities. Olympia, WA: The Board, 2001.

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23

Washington (State). Committee on Health Disparities. Final report: State Board of Health priority : health disparities. Olympia, WA: The Board, 2001.

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24

Kough, Mary Beth Winkeljohn. Special report--state health agency dental health activities, 1983. Washington D.C. (1220 L St., N.W., Suite 350, Washington 20005): Public Health Foundation, 1986.

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25

Washington (State). Committee on Health Disparities. Final report: State Board of Health priority : health disparities. Olympia, WA: Washington State Board of Health, 2001.

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26

Senn, Deborah. It's your choice: Health insurance, health providers & state law. Olympia, Wash. (P.O. Box 40255, Olympia, 98504-0255): Washington State Insurance Commissioner, 1999.

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27

Dearden, R. W. Resources & health deprivation. Birmingham: University of Birmingham, Health Services Management Centre, 1985.

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28

Mackenbach, Johan P. Health inequalities. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198831419.001.0001.

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‘Health inequalities—persistence and change in European welfare states’ studies why frequencies of disease, disability, and premature mortality are higher among people with a lower socioeconomic position, even in countries with advanced welfare states. Drawing upon data from 30 countries covering more than three decades, it provides a comprehensive overview of trends and patterns of health inequalities, showing that these are not only ubiquitous and persistent, but also highly variable and dynamic. It provides a critical assessment of recent research into the explanation of health inequalities, discussing methodological pitfalls, summarizing findings from epidemiological, sociological, economic, and genetic studies, and reviewing nine overarching theories. Based on in-depth studies of the determinants of health inequalities in European countries, it shows that the persistence of health inequalities is due to a combination of mostly favourable changes in social stratification, massive but differential health improvements, and persistence of social inequality in material and non-material living conditions. It discusses why social inequality is so persistent, and whether welfare state reform could contribute to reducing health inequalities, and provides a systematic analysis of the inequitableness of health inequalities according to five theories of justice. It reviews recent attempts by European national governments to reduce health inequalities, showing that it is realistic to expect evidence-based policies to reduce absolute but not relative inequalities in health. This title is written for scientists and advanced students from various disciplines, as well as for public health professionals and policymakers, and is profusely illustrated and referenced.
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29

Galea, Sandro, Catherine K. Ettman, and David Vlahov, eds. Urban Health. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190915858.001.0001.

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Urban health is the study of the health of urban populations. More than half the world’s population is now living in urban areas, and two-thirds of the world’s population will live in cities by 2030. This means that characteristics of cities—including, for example, features of the built environment—are shared by a large proportion of the global population. These characteristics ultimately shape how most of us think, feel, and behave; they shape what we eat and drink; and, inevitably, they shape our health. The ubiquity of urban exposures suggests that a full understanding of the features of urban environments that affect health—and how they do so—can unlock the potential for approaches to prevent disease, promote health, and make a substantial impact on the health of urban populations. Studying urban health therefore requires an appreciation both of the urban exposures themselves and the approaches that can inform scholarship in the field. This book combines these with case studies that illuminate the progression of health in cities, aiming to capture the current state of the field while also pushing the field, through holding a mirror to itself, to consider its next decade.
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30

Palfrey, Colin. The Future for Health Promotion. Policy Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447341239.001.0001.

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Does health promotion have a lasting and positive effect on people? With mounting pressure to reduce costs to the NHS and increasing scepticism of the so-called nanny state, health promotion initiatives are increasingly being criticised as costly and ineffective, with many arguing that health inequalities can only be reduced through radical political and economic change. This book examines the methods used to evaluate the value of health promotion projects and determines whether attempts to change people's lifestyles have proved successful. Taking into account the practical and ethical issues involved in deciding the appropriate approach to take in efforts to reduce health inequalities, the book assesses what might be the best path forward for health promotion.
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31

Bhugra, Dinesh, Antonio Ventriglio, and Kamaldeep S. Bhui. Mental state assessment: Basic principles. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198723196.003.0003.

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Mental state assessment or examination lies at the core of assessing patients and reaching a diagnosis that can be followed by appropriate and suitable management strategies. It is important that clinicians take enough time to carry out the assessment, which may require several sessions. This is especially true for patients whose cultures may differ from those of the clinician. It is important that assessments are not rushed and that gradual therapeutic alliance is developed so that patients and their carers have confidence in the clinician. Clinicians should take time to understand the cultural context of the individual and the significance of culture in the genesis, perpetuation, and prognosis of illness symptoms. Health professionals need to be aware of cultural idioms of distress and emotional and clinical needs. Even when both the clinician and the patient come from the same culture, a thorough and proper assessment is necessary.
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32

Lynch, Julia. A Cross-National Perspective on the American Welfare State. Edited by Daniel Béland, Kimberly J. Morgan, and Christopher Howard. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199838509.013.023.

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The welfare system in the United States is not simply “small,”“residualist,” or “laggard.” It is true that protection against standard social risks is generally less comprehensive and less generous in the United States than in other rich democracies, but there are other important differences as well: The U. S. welfare state is unusual in its extensive reliance on private markets to produce public social goods; its geographic variability; its insistence on deservingness as an eligibility criterion; and its orientation toward benefits for the elderly rather than children and working-age adults. Nevertheless, the U.S. welfare state is not sui generis. The actors involved in the construction of the U.S. welfare state, the institutions created in response to social problems, and the contemporary pressures confronting the welfare state all have parallels in other countries. The markets that provide so many social goods in the United States are the products of state action and state regulation, and hence should really be thought of as part of the welfare “state.” Even recent expansions to the welfare state in the United States have, with the partial exception of health-care reform, reinforced old patterns of elderly oriented spending and benefits for worthy (working) adults. In order for the U.S. welfare state to adjust successfully to ensure against new social risks, it must focus more on underdeveloped program areas like health care, child care, early childhood education, and vocational training.
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33

Williams, David M. Psychological Hedonism, Hedonic Motivation, and Health Behavior. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190499037.003.0010.

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Why is it so hard to choose the fruit salad instead of the chocolate cake? Why do we dread our daily workout? And why do some of us find it so difficult to quit smoking, quit drinking too much, or stop using drugs? This chapter argues that these unhealthy behaviors are largely a function of hedonic motivation: an automatically triggered motivational state that manifests in a felt desire to perform behaviors that have previously brought immediate pleasure, or dread of performing behaviors that have previously brought immediate displeasure. The concept of hedonic motivation is based on recent developments in the fields of affective neuroscience (i.e., incentive salience theory) and psychology (i.e., dual-processing theory) and is positioned herein as the central mechanism of the ancient and intuitive theory of psychological hedonism. Greater attention to hedonic motivation is critical for understanding behaviors that account for a significant proportion of worldwide death and disease.
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34

Michigan. State Health Planning Council., ed. State health plan. [Lansing, Mich.] (P.O. Box 30195): State Health Planning Council, 1991.

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35

Health Care State Rankings 2007: Health Care in the 50 United States (Health Care State Rankings) (Health Care State Rankings). Morgan Quitno Corporation, 2007.

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36

Illinois. Dept. of Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities., ed. State mental health plan. [Springfield]: The Dept., 1989.

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37

Health and the State. Cambridge, England: Independence Educational Publishers, 2010.

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38

Wisconsin. Center for Health Statistics., ed. State of our health. [Madison, Wis.]: Wisconsin Dept. of Health and Social Services, Division of Health, Center for Health Statistics, 1994.

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39

V, Clark Anita, ed. Mood state and health. New York: Nova Biomedical Books, 2005.

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40

Council, Oregon Health, ed. 1986 State health plan. Salem, Or: Oregon Health Council, 1986.

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41

Whitehead, Margaret. A State of Health. Health Education Authority, 1995.

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42

Alok, Mukhopadhyay, and Voluntary Health Association of India., eds. State of India's health. New Delhi: Voluntary Health Association of India, 1992.

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43

Sculpher, Mark, Laura Ginnelly, and Peter Smith. Health Policy and Economics (State of Health). Open University Press, 2004.

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44

Sculpher, Mark, Laura Ginnelly, and Peter Smith. Health Policy and Economics (State of Health). Open University Press, 2004.

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45

Health Care Coverage Determinations (State of Health). Open University Press, 2004.

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46

Borsboom, Denny. Mental disorders, network models, and dynamical systems. Edited by Kenneth S. Kendler and Josef Parnas. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198796022.003.0011.

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Network approaches have been proposed as an alternative way of thinking about relations between symptoms of mental disorders. Unlike traditional psychometric approaches, network models view these associations as the result of direct interactions between symptoms. Disorders are defined as alternative stable states of a network due to increased connectivity between symptoms. This increased connectivity creates a pattern of reinforcement, so the system can get stuck in a state of prolonged activation. Mental health is defined as the stable state of a weakly connected network. Although symptomatology may be temporarily increased in a healthy network (e.g., due to adverse life events), as the influence of a shock wanes the network will spontaneously return to its healthy state. Strongly connected networks, however, may transition into disordered states upon similar external shocks, and may not naturally recover. Thus, the proposed definitions yield plausible conceptualizations of resilience and vulnerability.
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47

State University of New York at Albany. Center for Health Workforce Studies. and United States. Health Resources and Services Administration. Bureau of Health Professions., eds. HRSA state health workforce profile [name of state]. Rockville, Md: Bureau of Health Professions, National Center for Health Workforce Information & Analysis, Health Resources and Services Administration, U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, 2000.

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48

Aspen Health & Administration Development Group (Editor), ed. State-By-State Health Care Collection Laws & Regulations. Aspen Publishers, 2002.

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49

(Editor), Kathleen O'Leary Morgan, and Scott Morgan (Editor), eds. Health Care State Rankings 2000: Health Care in the 50 United States (Health Care State Rankings). 8th ed. Morgan Quitno Corporation, 2000.

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50

(Editor), Kathleen O'Leary Morgan, and Scott Morgan (Editor), eds. Health Care State Rankings 2003: Health Care in the 50 United States (Health Care State Rankings). Morgan Quitno Corporation, 2003.

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