000 01580nam a2200217Ia 4500
999 _c164305
_d164305
005 20220301170633.0
008 200208s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a9241561319
082 _a307.76091724 TAB
100 _aTabibzadeh, I.
245 0 _aSpotlight on the cities
260 _aGeneva
260 _bWHO
260 _c1989
300 _a174p.
520 _aThe towns and cities of most developing countries are expanding at an unprecedented rate, as more and more people pour in from the rural areas in search of work and a better standard of living. In fact, what they find is often inferior in many ways to what they leave behind. In particular, a namber of alth problems, such as malnutrition, respiratory infections, diarrhoeal disease, and drug dependence, arise from or are exacerbated by the conditions in the slams and shanty towns, and the health services are generally inadequate to deal with them. Until recently, the plight of the urban poor has largely been ignored by health planners and decision-makers. This publication draws attention to the scale, nature and urgency of the situation in many cities, and advocates a fondamental shift in health care priorities towards the widespread application of primary health care. This is a message, not only for ministries of health, but equally for city hospitals and health departments, medical schools, the medical profession, and political leaders at both local and national levels.
650 _aUrban health.
700 _aRossi-Espagnet , A
700 _aMaxwell , R.
942 _cDB
_2ddc