A community program for the control of cardiovascular risk factors, the CHAD program, was instituted in a family practice in western Jerusalem in 1971. The effectiveness of the program was evaluated by comparing the findings of community surveys conducted in 1970 and 1975 and by comparing the changes with those observed in an adjacent control neighborhood. This paper reports the findings among men aged 35 years and above. In the community exposed to the program there was a decrease in mean systolic and disatolic pressures, in the prevalence of hypercholesterolemia, and in the prevalence of cigarette smoking. The changes in blood pressures and smoking habits were significantly greater than those observed in the control population. In the control population (only) there was a small increase in mean body weight and a decrease in reported physical activity. The findings suggest that it is possible for a program that operates and through primary health care to have an appreciable influence upon cardiovascular risk factors in the community.
This paper investigates the contribution of community to ethnic stratification in Israel. We show that "development towns," a category of new settlements established to achieve population dispersal and immigrant absorption, have influenced (a) the areal distributions of different ethnic (country-of-origin) groups, (b) the tendency for each group to be concentrated in certain industries, and (c) the occupational opportunities available to the members of an ethnic population. We also review the relevance of this analysis for understanding ethnic stratification in America.
Demographic and epidemiological changes will result in dramatic changes in the health needs of the world's populations. Everywhere there is a steep increase in the need for management of chronic diseases and for long-term care. Therefore, the search for effective policies to care for the frail elderly in general and long-term care (LTC) policies in particular, is one of the most pressing challenges facing modern society. There is no single converging paradigm and countries are experimenting with a number of different approaches. This section of the Monograph presents the experience in several developed and developing countries: Canada, United States, Italy, Germany, Sweden, Japan, Thailand and Chile. This effort is important because there is much to be learned from the experience of developed and developing countries in defining the range of policy options and in identifying successful and unsuccessful practices. In-depth understanding of the existing situations in developed and developing countries, and the nature of the variance among countries are important to provide insight for development of care policies by learning from what already exists. This article focuses on LTC, that is, on addressing the needs of the functionally disabled elderly. Our reflections are based on an international initiative to develop a decision-making framework for LTC policies launched by the World Health Organization (WHO) with the JDC-Brookdale Institute leading this effort.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.