Reprint

Social Public Health System and Sustainability

Edited by
September 2022
318 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5328-3 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5327-6 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Social Public Health System and Sustainability that was published in

Business & Economics
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary

This edited volume contains 18 articles published in Sustainability from late 2018 to early 2021. During that time, the world faced the fatal and widespread health crisis, COVID-19, which had threatened the social and public health systems at every corner for quite some time.As the Guest-Editors and also a contributing authors, we are glad that the academic contents from the Special Issue will now be put together in this volume, making the authors' hard work and efforts accessible to the larger audience.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
mobile phone penetration; divorce rate; marital happiness; well-being; physical exercises and sports; sex; educational background; social public health; health communication; sleep hygiene; health; old people; association; logistic regression; periodic general health examination; fear of illness detection; sex; Vietnam; depression; acculturation stress; social connectedness; international students; university students; ASSIS; Mindsponge; multicultural; emotional labor; surface acting; emotional dissonance; occupational stress; moderated mediation; hospital; rural and urban hospitals; healthcare; sustainable rural health; the financial condition; government health expenditure (GHE) efficiency; data envelopment analysis (DEA) method; Moran’s I value; spatial spillover effect (SSE); spatial Durbin model (SDM); diet; nutrition; intake; public health; health professionals; dietary risk; depressive disorder; university student; scientific output; international collaboration; funding; Korea; Japan; China; scientific impact; scientific quality; coronavirus; COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; pandemic; policy response; social media; science journalism; public health system; Vietnam; COVID-19; healthcare systems; aged populations; job insecurity; health and consumption indicators; gender inequalities; sustainable preventive policies; readmission; social capital; economics; mental health; drug abuse; space–health nexus; older women; spatial planning perspective; interdisciplinary expert dialogue; retrospective qualitative study; knowledge transfer; health policy analysis; efficiency; gender; CEO; top management team (TMT); data envelopment analysis (DEA); truncated regression; bootstrap; upper echelon theory; public health; public health authorities; public communication; risk communication; social networks; lockdown; crisis; COVID-19 pandemic; sustainability; NSP; harm reduction; harm minimization; low threshold settings; PWID; sustainable implementation qualities