All Stories

  1. It Took 175 Years, but Marxist Insights into the Health Effects of Capitalism are Entering Mainstream Public Health Discourse
  2. Health studies students consider the relevance of Georg Grosz’s depictions of social inequalities in Weimar Germany to the contemporary Canadian scene
  3. Late-Stage Capitalism and the Canadian Polycrisis in Living and Working Conditions: Implications for Health and Means of Responding
  4. The Quality of Life Research Unit at the University of Toronto: Eulogy and the Rebirth of a Quality of Life Research and Practice Agenda
  5. Relevance of Georg Grosz’s Weimar-era drawings to promoting social justice and health equity in contemporary society
  6. Promoting Health Equity in an Era of Growing Contradictions Between Capital Accumulation and Social Reproduction in Capitalist Economies
  7. Canadian credit unions and the prospects for a post-capitalist economy
  8. Critical Analysis of Jane Philpott's Health for All
  9. Using Brecht's Poetry to Promote Health Equity
  10. Crisis of capitalism: social welfare states or socialist states as the way forward?
  11. Historical perspectives
  12. Liberal/Individualized Versus Materialist/Structuralist Approaches to Addressing Social and Health Inequalities: Education and Income as Social Determinants of Health
  13. The Politics of Food Insecurity in Canada and the United Kingdom
  14. The Old Mole and the New Democratic Party: Why the NDP is an Impediment to Social Progress in Canada
  15. Promoting social justice in the capitalist academy? Health equity and the Johns Hopkins University Michael Bloomberg School of Public Health
  16. Defining health through a critical materialist political economy lens
  17. Policy-related Homelessness Discourses in Canada: Implications for Nursing Research, Practice, and Advocacy
  18. The modern welfare state and the post-pandemic world
  19. Beyond Empathy to System Change: Four Poems on Health by Bertolt Brecht
  20. A critical analysis of the Finnish Baby Box’s journey into the liberal welfare state: Implications for progressive public policymaking
  21. 1845 or 2023? Friedrich Engels’s insights into the health effects of Victorian‐era and contemporary Canadian capitalism
  22. Socialism as the way forward: updating a discourse analysis of the social determinants of health
  23. From personal responsibility to an eco-socialist state: Political economy, popular discourses and the climate crisis
  24. Communicating Friedrich Engels's return to Manchester: Arts and cultural event, history lesson, or call to action?
  25. Resisting the Effects of Neoliberalism on Public Policy Comment on "Implementing Universal and Targeted Policies for Health Equity: Lessons From Australia"
  26. Emerging Themes in Social Determinants of Health Theory and Research
  27. Corporate and business domination of food banks and food diversion schemes in Canada
  28. Mainstream News Media's Engagement with Friedrich Engels’s Concept of Social Murder
  29. Does unionization and working under collective agreements promote health?
  30. Desperately seeking reductions in health inequalities in Canada: Polemics and anger mobilization as the way forward?
  31. The reemergence of Engels’ concept of social murder in response to growing social and health inequalities
  32. A bibliometric analysis of Health Promotion International content regarding unions, unionization and collective agreements
  33. Take the money and run: how food banks became complicit with Walmart Canada’s hunger producing employment practices
  34. Health inequality
  35. Conceptualizing and researching health equity in Africa through a political economy of health lens – Rwanda in perspective
  36. Erratum to: “Canada’s Detention of Children in Immigration Holding Centres
  37. Canada’s Detention of Children in Immigration Holding Centres
  38. Competing Discourses of Household Food Insecurity in Canada
  39. Governmental Illegitimacy and Incompetency in Canada and Other Liberal Nations: Implications for Health
  40. Understanding the Promotion of Health Equity at the Local Level Requires Far More than Quantitative Analyses of YesNo Survey Data Comment on "Health Promotion at Local Level in Norway: The Use of Public Health Coordinators and Health Overviews to Promo...
  41. Canada considers a basic income guarantee: can it achieve health for all?
  42. The cultural hegemony of chronic disease association discourse in Canada
  43. OUP accepted manuscript
  44. Care leavers: A British affair
  45. Assuming policy responsibility for health equity: local public health action in Ontario, Canada
  46. The obesity health problem is way overblown.
  47. Perpetuating the utopia of health behaviourism: A case study of the Canadian Men’s Health Foundation’s Don’t Change Much initiative
  48. New hypotheses regarding the Danish health puzzle
  49. Labonté Identifies Key Issues for Health Promoters in the New World Order Comment on "Health Promotion in an Age of Normative Equity and Rampant Inequality"
  50. Reflections on the UK’s legacy of health inequalities research and policy from a North American perspective
  51. The Political Economy of Health: A Research Agenda for Addressing Health Inequalities in Canada
  52. Erratum: Power, intersectionality and the life-course: Identifying the political and economic structures of welfare states that support or threaten health
  53. Power, intersectionality and the life-course: Identifying the political and economic structures of welfare states that support or threaten health
  54. Understanding action on the social determinants of health: a critical realist analysis of in-depth interviews with staff of nine Ontario public health units
  55. INTRODUCTION TO THE SPECIAL ISSUE ON THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF CHILDREN’S HEALTH
  56. THE PARAMETERS OF CHILDREN’S HEALTH: KEY CONCEPTS FROM THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF HEALTH LITERATURE
  57. Beyond policy analysis: the raw politics behind opposition to healthy public policy
  58. Ideological and organizational components of differing public health strategies for addressing the social determinants of health
  59. SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF CHILDREN’S HEALTH IN CANADA: ANALYSIS AND IMPLICATIONS
  60. Challenges to promoting health in the modern welfare state: The case of the Nordic nations
  61. Epistemological barriers to addressing the social determinants of health among public health professionals in Ontario, Canada: a qualitative inquiry
  62. Adolescence as a gateway to adult health outcomes
  63. The Social Determinants of Non-communicable Diseases: A Political Perspective
  64. Latest OECD Figures Confirm Canada as a Public Health Laggard
  65. Educating the Canadian public about the social determinants of health: the time for local public health action is now!
  66. The dynamics of the relationship between diabetes incidence and low income: Longitudinal results from Canada's National Population Health Survey
  67. A toxic combination of poor social policies and programmes, unfair economic arrangements and bad politics: the experiences of poor Canadians with Type 2 diabetes
  68. Type 2 Diabetes in Vulnerable Populations: Community Healthcare Providers' Perspectives on Health Service Needs and Policy Implications
  69. The political economy of health promotion: part 1, national commitments to provision of the prerequisites of health
  70. The political economy of health promotion: part 2, national provision of the prerequisites of health†
  71. A discourse analysis of the social determinants of health
  72. Canada: A land of missed opportunity for addressing the social determinants of health
  73. Poverty in childhood and adverse health outcomes in adulthood
  74. Mainstream media and the social determinants of health in Canada: is it time to call it a day?
  75. Diabetes prevalence and income: Results of the Canadian Community Health Survey
  76. CPHA and the Social Determinants of Health: An Analysis of Policy Documents and Statements and Recommendations for Future Action
  77. The health of Canada's children. Part IV: Toward the future
  78. The health of Canada's children. Part III: Public policy and the social determinants of children's health
  79. The health of Canada's children. Part II: Health mechanisms and pathways
  80. The health of Canada's children. Part I: Canadian children's health in comparative perspective
  81. The Experience of Living with Diabetes for Low-income Canadians
  82. Restructuring Society in the Service of Mental Health Promotion: Are we Willing to Address the Social Determinants of Mental Health?
  83. Income and Health in Canada: Canadian Researchers' Conceptualizations Make Policy Change Unlikely
  84. Poverty, Sense of Belonging and Experiences of Social Isolation
  85. “Who Do They Think We Are, Anyway?”: Perceptions of and Responses to Poverty Stigma
  86. Escaping from the Phantom Zone: social determinants of health, public health units and public policy in Canada
  87. Introduction to the Special Issue on Social Inequalities and Health
  88. Reducing Social and Health Inequalities Requires Building Social and Political Movements
  89. Barriers to addressing the social determinants of health: Insights from the Canadian experience
  90. Grasping at straws: a recent history of health promotion in Canada
  91. Getting serious about the social determinants of health: new directions for public health workers
  92. Public Attributions for Poverty in Canada*
  93. Left out: Perspectives on social exclusion and inclusion across income groups
  94. Beyond Positivism: Public Scholarship in Support of Health
  95. Shaping Public Policy and Population Health in the United States: Why is the Public Health Community Missing in Action?
  96. Public policies and the problematic USA population health profile
  97. Nouvelle Série de Rapports de Recherche : l'UIPES donne aux étudiants de troisième cycle la possibilité de diffuser leurs recherches à l'échelle mondiale
  98. Identifying and Strengthening the Structural Roots of Urban Health in Canada: Participatory Policy Research and the Urban Health Agenda
  99. Maintaining Population Health in a Period of Welfare State Decline: Political Economy as the Missing Dimension in Health Promotion Theory and Practice
  100. Social Determinants of Health: Present Status, Unanswered Questions, and Future Directions
  101. Revenu et santé au Canada: Lacunes sur le plan de la recherche et possibilités futures
  102. The state's role in promoting population health: Public health concerns in Canada, USA, UK, and Sweden
  103. Lay understandings of the effects of poverty: a Canadian perspective
  104. Researching income and income distribution as determinants of health in Canada: gaps between theoretical knowledge, research practice, and policy implementation
  105. The American Cancer Society, American Diabetes Association, and American Heart Association Joint Statement on Preventing Cancer, Cardiovascular Disease, and Diabetes: Where are the social determinants?
  106. Identifying and Addressing the Social Determinants of the Incidence and Successful Management of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in Canada
  107. What Do Canadian Seniors Say Supports Their Quality of Life?
  108. Toronto charter outlines future health policy directions for Canada and elsewhere
  109. The welfare state as a determinant of women’s health: support for women’s quality of life in Canada and four comparison nations
  110. Barriers to addressing the societal determinants of health: public health units and poverty in Ontario, Canada
  111. The social determinants of the incidence and management of type 2 diabetes mellitus: are we prepared to rethink our questions and redirect our research activities?
  112. Bridging the gap between knowledge and action on the societal determinants of cardiovascular disease: how one Canadian community effort hit – and hurdled – the lifestyle wall
  113. Beyond medicine and lifestyle: addressing the societal determinants of cardiovascular disease in North America
  114. The limitations of population health as a model for a new public health
  115. Addressing health inequalities in Canada
  116. Cardiovascular Health in Canada: Are We Fiddling While Rome is Burning?
  117. Making the links between community structure and individual well-being: community quality of life in Riverdale, Toronto, Canada
  118. Community Quality of Life in Low-Income Neighborhoods: Findings From Two Contrasting Communities in Toronto, Canada
  119. How Government Policy Decisions Affect Seniors’ Quality of Life: Findings from a Participatory Policy Study Carried Out in Toronto, Canada
  120. Letter from Canada: paradigms, politics and principles: An end of the millennium update from the birthplace of the Healthy Cities movement
  121. Factor Analytic Properties of the Quality of Life Profile: Examination of the Nine Subdomain Quality of Life Model
  122. The Widening Gap: Health Inequalities and Policy in Britain
  123. Heterogeneity among smokers and non-smokers in attitudes and behaviour regarding smoking and smoking restrictions
  124. The question of evidence in health promotion
  125. Should Public Health Workers be Able to Address the Public’s Health?
  126. Health inequalities in Canada: Current discourses and implications for public health action
  127. Government Policies as a Threat to Health: Findings from Two Toronto Community Quality of Life Studies
  128. Health Inequities in the United States: Prospects and Solutions
  129. Putting the Population into Population Health
  130. The Community Quality of Life Project: a health promotion approach to understanding communities
  131. Reply by Dennis Raphael
  132. Psychometric Properties of the Full and Short Versions of the Quality of Life Instrument Package: Results from the Ontario province-wide study
  133. Public Health Responses to Health Inequalities
  134. Emerging Concepts of Health and Health Promotion
  135. Measuring the quality of life of older persons: a model with implications for community and public health nursing
  136. The quality of life profile—Adolescent version: Background, description, and initial validation
  137. Determinants of health of North-American adolescents: Evolving definitions, recent findings, and proposed research agenda
  138. Assessing the Quality of Life of Persons with Developmental Disabilities: Description of a New Model, Measuring Instruments, and Initial Findings
  139. Quality of life indicators and health: Current status and emerging conceptions
  140. Frailty
  141. Practice Interests and Self-Identification among Social Work Students: Changes over the Course of Graduate Social Work Education
  142. Assessing the knowledge and skill needs of community-based health promoters
  143. Women in the Sandwich Generation:
  144. Caring for elderly parents and adult children living at home: Interactions of the Sandwich Generation family
  145. Communication and problem solving achievement in cooperative learning groups
  146. High School Conceptual Level as an Indicator of Young Adult Adjustment
  147. Physics in canadian secondary schools: Intentions, perceptions, and achievement
  148. School structure and its relationship to instructional methods and student outcomes in mathematics
  149. Student teachers' perceptions of the identity formation process
  150. Adolescents' Anxiety and Intolerance of Ambiguity Scores as Predictors of Dropping-Out of a Study
  151. Identity status in high school students: Critique and a revised paradigm
  152. Identity status in university women: A methodological note
  153. Interdependence of formal reasoning.
  154. Beyond Positivism: Public Scholarship in Support of Health