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Background: Interventions tackling the social aspects of tuberculosis (TB) are widely suggested, yet we miss insights into how policies incorporate these. The language and framing of policies to address TB can lend important insights into how these social drivers are perceived, problematized, and responded to.
Objective: To understand how discourses in current TB policies frame social dimensions of TB, especially concepts of social inequity, gender, and stigma.
Methods: We conducted a comparative critical discourse analysis of twenty-one publicly available TB-related policies from Belarus, Brazil, Indonesia, Mozambique, Netherlands, Portugal, and Romania, countries with diverse epidemiological, geographical and sociopolitical contexts. Documents were sourced from public websites from May - September 2024. The Bacchi approach was used to analyze policy framings of social inequities, gender, and stigma.
Result: While policies from Brazil and Indonesia showed greater attention to social inequities, gender, and stigma, and were more explicitly reflective of an equity-oriented and people-centered approach, overall, a dominant biomedical perspective was observed that individualizes responsibility for cure. This tends to disregard issues of social inequity, obscures gender relationships and the multiple dimensions of stigma. At the same time, allocation of individual as well as structural responsibility for TB risk and outcomes co-existed.
Conclusions: Explicit and implicit discourses about TB within health-related policies can influence the nature of attention given to the social dimensions of TB and can shape corresponding responses to the disease. We recommend a participative policy process that includes a broader set of actors to ensure documents are responsive to social realities.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2025.2547150 | DOI Listing |
Nat Rev Neurol
September 2025
Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Health disparities are preventable differences in health between different populations, and they are endemic throughout medicine owing to social, economic and environmental disadvantages. Neurology is no exception, and health disparities for systematically marginalized groups are present in the prevention, diagnosis, treatment and outcomes of all neurological disorders. The aetiology of these disparities is complex and multifactorial, reflecting the interplay of structural, institutional and individual-level factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Health Prev Med
September 2025
Faculty of Medicine, University of the Ryukyus.
Background: Changes in socioeconomic inequalities in health behaviours following the COVID-19 pandemic remain unknown, particularly among Japanese school-aged adolescents. Therefore, in this study, we examined changes in socioeconomic inequalities in school-aged adolescents' health behaviours, including physical activity (PA), screen time (ST), sleep duration, breakfast consumption, and bowel movement frequency, before and after the pandemic.
Methods: This three-wave repeated cross-sectional study utilised data from the 2019, 2021, and 2023 National Sports-Life Survey of Children and Young People in Japan, analysing data from 766, 725, and 604 participants aged 12-18 years, respectively.
J Invest Dermatol
September 2025
Department of Social Medicine and Health Management, Xiangya School of Public Health, Central South University, Changsha 410008, China; Department of Dermatology, Xiangya Hospital, Central South University, Changsha, China; Furong Laboratory, Changsha, China; Hunan Key Laboratory of Skin Cancer and
Psoriasis is a chronic, immune-mediated inflammatory skin disorder affecting approximately 100 million people worldwide. This study aimed to understand the global impact of psoriasis on health and economics over the past three decades. we analyzed trends in psoriasis cases, its effects on people's quality of life, and the associated costs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurgery
September 2025
Department of Surgery, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL. Electronic address: https://twitter.com/selwyn_rogers.
Public policy and health care are demonstrably interconnected. Medical and surgical outcomes are inseparableable from the political processes and laws that govern our nation. Health care delivery and public health are shaped by public discourse in city councils, county commissions, and state/national legislatures and agencies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Am Thorac Soc
September 2025
Hadassah Medical Center, Pediatric Pulmonology Unit and Cystic Fibrosis Center, Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel.
Background Although advances in care have improved cystic fibrosis (CF) outcomes in higher-income countries (HICs), the situation remains alarming in lower-income countries (LICs). Methods People with CF (pwCF) enrolled in the European Cystic Fibrosis Society Patient Registry (ECFSPR) and carrying at least one F508del variant allele were evaluated in 2017 and in 2022 for predicted percent forced expiratory volume (ppFEV1), underweight status, and chronic Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Pa) infection, according to the gross national income (GNI) per capita divided into three terciles (low-income countries, LICs; middle-income countries, MICs; and high-income countries, HICs). Survival was evaluated in the periods 2013-2017 and 2018-2022.
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