Humanitarian intervention In urban health in South Asia region

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By 2050, nearly 70% of the world's population could live in urban areas. Urbanization is a multidimensional reality that involves major changes in the way people work and live, and offers unprecedented opportunities to improve their literacy levels, health status and life expectancy, improve their environmental sustainability and make more efficient use of increasingly scarce natural resources. However, this phenomenon does not necessarily result into an equitable distribution of services and well-being, thus increasing urban poverty relative to rural poverty. Especially in South Asian developing countries, women, children, ethnic minorities and migrants living in deprived neighborhoods and slums face sociocultural, economic, environmental and political challenges that limit their access to health care. So how does urbanization affect health in developing countries? What can justify the need for a humanitarian approach adapted to urban contexts for RMNCH interventions, particularly in South Asia? This work is intended as an initial diagnosis of the South Asian urban environment to understand how urbanization affects RMNCH in the cities of Dhaka and Yangon.

Autorentext

Simon Minkeng est anthropologue et expert en projets de développement international.Cette étude a été réalisée dans le cadre d'une étude prospective visant à établir un premier diagnostic de l'environnement urbain en Asie du Sud et à contribuer à la réflexion d'ACF sur l'intervention de santé publique en milieu urbain dans les pays en développement.


Klappentext

By 2050, nearly 70% of the world's population could live in urban areas. Urbanization is a multidimensional reality that involves major changes in the way people work and live, and offers unprecedented opportunities to improve their literacy levels, health status and life expectancy, improve their environmental sustainability and make more efficient use of increasingly scarce natural resources. However, this phenomenon does not necessarily result into an equitable distribution of services and well-being, thus increasing urban poverty relative to rural poverty. Especially in South Asian developing countries, women, children, ethnic minorities and migrants living in deprived neighborhoods and slums face sociocultural, economic, environmental and political challenges that limit their access to health care. So how does urbanization affect health in developing countries? What can justify the need for a humanitarian approach adapted to urban contexts for RMNCH interventions, particularly in South Asia? This work is intended as an initial diagnosis of the South Asian urban environment to understand how urbanization affects RMNCH in the cities of Dhaka and Yangon.

Weitere Informationen

  • Allgemeine Informationen
    • Sprache Englisch
    • Anzahl Seiten 80
    • Herausgeber LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing
    • Gewicht 137g
    • Untertitel Prospective analysis to improve the humanitarian approach of reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health (RMNCH)
    • Autor Simon Minkeng
    • Titel Humanitarian intervention In urban health in South Asia region
    • Veröffentlichung 13.01.2022
    • ISBN 6204732129
    • Format Kartonierter Einband
    • EAN 9786204732121
    • Jahr 2022
    • Größe H220mm x B150mm x T5mm
    • GTIN 09786204732121

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