Editorial

“The Fight of the Moment”: Bernie Sanders on the fight to bring universal health care to the United States
Health & Innovation, Policy & Practice Elizabeth Loftus Health & Innovation, Policy & Practice Elizabeth Loftus

“The Fight of the Moment”: Bernie Sanders on the fight to bring universal health care to the United States

On Sunday, October 29th, 2017, U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders (Vermont) and Dr. Danielle Martin, Associate Professor at the Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation based in the Dalla Lana School of Public Health, met at Convocation Hall to discuss what lies ahead in the fight for a universal health care system in the United States…

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Interview: Will the Canadian government guarantee its citizens the right to a healthy environment?

Interview: Will the Canadian government guarantee its citizens the right to a healthy environment?

Juxtaposition sits down with Peter Wood, the BC-based Environmental Rights Campaign Manager for the David Suzuki Foundation, to discuss the BlueDot movement. BlueDot aims to push the Canadian government to recognize the right to a healthy environment for every Canadian.

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Tackling Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis in Conflict-ridden Donbass, Ukraine
Diseases & Illnesses, Security & Human Rights Neha Malhotra, Matthew Yau, Padmaja Sreeram, & Ramachandiran Sethuraman Diseases & Illnesses, Security & Human Rights Neha Malhotra, Matthew Yau, Padmaja Sreeram, & Ramachandiran Sethuraman

Tackling Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis in Conflict-ridden Donbass, Ukraine

Tuberculosis (TB), an airborne infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis), has plagued mankind for centuries. Although TB is no longer an immediate threat to the developed world, it disproportionately affects low-income countries and regions of conflict because its root causes stem from social inequity…

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Lead Poisoning: A Review
Diseases & Illnesses Abtin Parnia Diseases & Illnesses Abtin Parnia

Lead Poisoning: A Review

The crisis in Flint, Michigan, has brought lead poisoning to the forefront of North American public health discourse. However, as one of the oldest hazards known to public health, lead has been studied extensively, and numerous policies have been implemented to reduce exposure to lead…

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Dying Early Behind Bars: Nothing “Natural” About Deaths in Canadian Prisons
Security & Human Rights Alina Yu Security & Human Rights Alina Yu

Dying Early Behind Bars: Nothing “Natural” About Deaths in Canadian Prisons

As an institution near-explicitly dedicated to disempowerment and deprivation, the prison system is as pure an antithesis to a healthy setting as possible. Yet – and it should go without saying – the institution responsible for incarceration and rehabilitation also has a responsibility to provide care to, and respect the human rights of inmates…

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When Two Elephants Fight: Climate Change and Militant Groups Across Africa

When Two Elephants Fight: Climate Change and Militant Groups Across Africa

As continued effects of degradation of the environment reach across many aspects of health and development, the impacts of climate change on human health are still being understood. While climate change is a global phenomenon mostly perpetuated by rich nations, it is usually the poorer nations who bear the brunt of the burdens…

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The Trans-Pacific Partnership: Implications for Canadian Public Health
Drugs & Pharmaceuticals Lena Faust Drugs & Pharmaceuticals Lena Faust

The Trans-Pacific Partnership: Implications for Canadian Public Health

On October 5, 2015, twelve Pacific Rim countries, representing almost 40 percent of the global GDP, reached an agreement on the highly controversial Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). Although proponents predict that the TPP will lead to economic growth in its member countries through the increased economic integration of markets in the Asia-Pacific region…

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