Two-generation programs and health.

4区 法学 Q1 Social Sciences
Sherry Glied, Don Oellerich
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引用次数: 15

Abstract

Parents' health and children's health are closely intertwined--healthier parents have healthier children, and vice versa. Genetics accounts for some of this relationship, but much of it can be traced to environment and behavior, and the environmental and behavioral risk factors for poor health disproportionately affect families living in poverty. Unhealthy children are likely to become unhealthy adults, and poor health drags down both their educational attainment and their income. Because of the close connection between parents' and children's health, write Sherry Glied and Don Oellerich, we have every reason to believe that programs to improve parents' health will improve their children's health as well. Yet few programs aim to work this way, except for a narrow category of programs that target pregnant women, newborns, and very young children. Glied and Oellerich assess these programs, discuss why there are so few of them, and suggest ways to expand them. Their chief conclusion is that structural barriers in the U.S. healthcare system stand in the way of such programs. Some of these barriers have to do with health insurance, access to care, and benefits, but the biggest one is the fact that physicians typically specialize in treating either children or adults, rather than families as a whole. The Affordable Care Act has begun to break down some of these barriers, the authors write, but much remains to be done.

两代计划和健康。
父母的健康和孩子的健康是紧密相连的——父母越健康,孩子越健康,反之亦然。基因在一定程度上解释了这种关系,但很大程度上可以追溯到环境和行为,导致健康状况不佳的环境和行为风险因素对贫困家庭的影响尤为严重。不健康的儿童很可能成为不健康的成年人,健康状况不佳会拖累他们的教育程度和收入。Sherry glies和Don Oellerich写道,由于父母和孩子的健康之间有着密切的联系,我们有充分的理由相信,改善父母健康的项目也会改善孩子的健康。然而,除了针对孕妇、新生儿和幼儿的少数项目外,很少有项目以这种方式为目标。glies和Oellerich对这些项目进行了评估,讨论了为什么这些项目如此之少,并提出了扩大这些项目的方法。他们的主要结论是,美国医疗体系中的结构性障碍阻碍了此类项目的实施。其中一些障碍与健康保险、获得护理和福利有关,但最大的障碍是医生通常专门治疗儿童或成人,而不是整个家庭。作者写道,《平价医疗法案》已经开始打破其中的一些障碍,但仍有许多工作要做。
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来源期刊
Future of Children
Future of Children Multiple-
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期刊介绍: The Future of Children is a collaboration of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University and the Brookings Institution. The mission of The Future of Children is to translate the best social science research about children and youth into information that is useful to policymakers, practitioners, grant-makers, advocates, the media, and students of public policy. The project publishes two journals and policy briefs each year, and provides various short summaries of our work. Topics range widely -- from income policy to family issues to education and health – with children’s policy as the unifying element. The senior editorial team is diverse, representing two institutions and multiple disciplines.
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