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Harvard Public Health Review

Winter 2010

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Can Cost-Effective Health Care=Better Health Care?
Experts agree that curbing costs is essential to effective health care reform in the United States if we are ever to provide medical treatment for everyone who needs it. But how to cut costs while maintaining high quality? In this special report, the Review talks to Harvard School of Public Health researchers to examine how U.S. health care can cover more people by more rationally using resources—but without health care rationing.

Also in this issue

Frenk thumbnail (tlc10_frenk.jpg)Dean's Message: H1N1 and Comprehensive Health Security
The H1N1 pandemic has had a profound impact on global security.

winter10plastics_small2Plastics: Danger Where We Least Expect It
Should we avoid the plastic water bottles, food cans, and myriad other products in our daily lives that contain BPA?

Salhi thumbnail (salhi_thumbnail.jpg)Bridging a Cultural Divide
Are better tools needed to identify emotional distress in non-Western refugees?

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Happiness & Health: Are Good Moods Good Medicine?
A new avenue of public health explores whether a sunny outlook could mean fewer colds and less heart disease

AIDS at 30: Hard Lessons and Hope
Thirty years after the first official reports about HIV/AIDS, we look back on the human devastation and forward to a changed social landscape.

Reining in Health Care Costs
As commissioner of the Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy, Sarah Iselin, SM ’99, is responsible for implementing key provisions of state health care legislation—despite a budge deficit that in February 2009 exceeded $1.5 billion

Child Brides, Child Mothers, Child Victims
Changing the cycle of family abuse in India and South Asia


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