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Over the centuries the health of populations has improved because science has helped us understand the main causes of disease affecting large populations from iodine deficiency to smoking and how technologies or strategies can be delivered to reduce hazards among those affected. At the same time the broader policy-relevant issue of population effects of exposure to risks has remained under-explored relative to our documentation of established diseases. During the last quarter of the twentieth century a number of works have addressed both the methodological and empirical aspects of population-wide impacts of major causes of diseases. This gradual establishment of risk assessment or risk quantification has been driven partly by the academic curiosity of individual researchers and partly by the demands of regulatory agencies and public policy for better quantitative evidence on the health implications of certain risk exposures. These efforts nonetheless have generally been within the disciplinary and methodological traditions of individual risk factors and in a limited number of settings. As a result the criteria for evaluating scientific evidence have varied greatly across risk factors resulting in lack of comparability across risk factors. This book provides a comprehensive assessment of the scientific evidence on prevalence and hazards and the resulting health effects of a range of exposures that are known to be hazardous to human health including childhood and maternal undernutrition nutritional and physiological risk factors for adult health addictive substances sexual and reproductive health and risks in the physical environments of households and communities as well as among workers. This book is the culmination of over 3 years of scientific enquiry and data collection collectively known as the Comparative Risk Assessment (CRA) project involving over 100 scientists applying a common analytical framework and methods to ensure greater consistency and comparability in using and evaluating scientific evidence across risks. As a result our understanding of the comparative extent of disease burden caused by various exposures worldwide has advanced and key areas of scientific enquiry to better inform policy needs to reduce risks have been elucidated. As public health researchers and practitioners evaluate policy alternatives for improving population health this book not only demonstrates the enormous potential for disease prevention but also provides a fundamental reference for the scientific evidence on some of the most important global risks to health.
· 2007
Transform Your Shattered Life The book will enable you to... Learn how to pick up the pieces of your shattered life and become a new person Discover what it takes to rid yourself of old habits Explore how you can possess joy, peace, and happiness in a lost world "They amassed so much bling it was obscene. High-rise condos in Florida. A yacht. A Hummer. A BMW. A Porsche 911. Diamonds. Clothes. Electronics. They made so much money, it was bundled in bags. Brothers, friends, associates. Mexico to Miami. For years, their pipeline ran at full speed. But with agents at their gates, not even their Cartier or Rolex watches could tell them time was running out." -Jamie Satterfield, Knoxville News Sentinel reporter
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· 1996
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· 2001
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