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1 f health and well-being and emphasize health equity.
2 tunities to prevent child deaths and promote equity.
3 ss the effects of Incredible Years on social equity.
4  policy of inclusion, diversity, access, and equity.
5  coverage does not include representation of equity.
6  to optimizing care and advancing healthcare equity.
7 ral health and achieving greater oral health equity.
8 its successes in and challenges to achieving equity.
9  age 18 to 84 years (D/100K) as a measure of equity.
10 needed survivorship care services and health equity.
11 fect of panel size on safety, efficiency, or equity.
12 gether with their potential impact on health equity.
13 tainable Development Goals strongly focus on equity.
14 uate the legislation's impact on health-care equity.
15  and CVD may have differing implications for equity.
16 vement and devising policy to promote health equity.
17 ties, and improving food security and social equity.
18 ual and population health and advance health equity.
19 ment, funding, and ethical concerns, such as equity.
20 tial impacts on population health and health equity.
21 ustainability, food security, nutrition, and equity.
22 es and financial protection, with a focus on equity.
23 ase virtual XM accuracy and organ allocation equity.
24 able DQ alleles and improve organ allocation equity.
25 lth a necessary step toward achieving health equity.
26 ximum waiting time," a surrogate for patient equity.
27 l is available for investment in debt versus equity.
28 f transplant education are needed to improve equity.
29 aditional sources such as private and public equity.
30 o assessing progress in moving toward health equity.
31 rtality and morbidity while improving health equity.
32 nd its afterlives through the lens of health equity.
33  Sanitation and Hygiene Applied Research for Equity.
34 sations may be an important factor in health equity.
35    What do "microbes" have to do with social equity?
36 gor and reproducibility; 4) transparency; 5) equity; 6) information dissemination (education, communi
37 ion and biodiversity conservation and social equity, accounting for the equitable distribution of int
38 aphy as a proxy for poverty, we analysed the equity achieved under the financial system at both hospi
39 cale effective interventions, create greater equity across schools, and improve outcomes for children
40 an Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Organ Policy Equity Act allows for transplantation of organs from HIV
41  the 2008 Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act and the 2010 Affordable Care Act incorporated
42       The Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act requires insurance parity for mental health/s
43 the United States under the HIV Organ Policy Equity Act.
44 ons and needs, while also promoting a health equity agenda and extending the quality, reach and impac
45 .83-3.45; p < 0.001; attitude towards gender equity: aMD = 1.02; 95% CI: 0.65-1.40; p < 0.001; freque
46 ify research priorities for improving health equity among minority patients with IBD.
47 pectrum of inclusion, diversity, access, and equity among the Infectious Diseases (ID) workforce is e
48 ta to aid future organizers achieve improved equity among the limited number of available positions f
49  quantitative analysis was undertaken (e.g., equity analyses, difference-in-difference regression, Oa
50 -age z scores (HAZ) means and distributions, equity analysis, predicted child growth curves through p
51 tories of the Americas that works to advance equity and access to vaccination.
52                                   Protecting equity and autonomy, and an implicit trust in health pro
53 ed in the principles of rights, justice, and equity and can address the root-cause determinants of he
54      We investigated the causal link between equity and conservation effort with a randomized real-ef
55 duce a range of trade-off typologies between equity and conservation, depending on how one defines an
56    However, these remarkable achievements in equity and coverage are counterbalanced by the persisten
57                                We found wide equity and economic gaps in global cancer surgery.
58 ually achieve the NOTA criteria of balancing equity and efficiency given current conditions of growin
59 unity has long recognized the need to ensure equity and efficiency of the organ allocation system.
60  the health-care system that promotes health equity and eliminates impoverishment due to out-of-pocke
61 eraged to increase immunization coverage and equity and enhance global health security in the focus c
62  conceptual report, the third in a Series on equity and equality in health in the USA, we use a conte
63                             In the spirit of equity and equality, the authors call for recognition of
64 of living donation and articulated important equity and ethical considerations for protecting the hea
65                                   We discuss equity and ethical issues related to future clinical ado
66 this study were from the World Bank's Health Equity and Financial Protection Indicators database (201
67  discuss how the conceptualization of health equity and how equity considerations in US public health
68 igation; (2) review how the fields of health equity and implementation science are related; (3) demon
69 endations for the future direction of health equity and implementation science research in the contex
70            Success in this work will advance equity and improve health in communities all around the
71  promising approach towards advancing health equity and improving population health.
72 or the Surgery of Trauma was to characterize equity and inclusion in ACS.
73    The aim of this study was to characterize equity and inclusion in acute care surgery (ACS) with a
74                                     Ensuring equity and inclusion may help ACS attract and retain the
75 cientific community can make in prioritizing equity and inclusion throughout science.
76  This is the first survey of ACS surgeons on equity and inclusion.
77  and Howard Hiatt Residency in Global Health Equity and Internal Medicine at the Brigham and Women's
78 can Heart Association's commitment to health equity and its focus on social determinants of health to
79  trade-offs between enhancing distributional equity and meeting environmental targets under alternati
80  This review describes the context of health equity and options for integrating equity into public he
81 ights the tradeoff between transplant access equity and outcomes and calls into question the deemphas
82  economic spheres--to achieve greater health equity and protect future generations.
83 rn baby, close gaps in coverage, and improve equity and quality for antenatal, intrapartum, and postn
84 le are needed to achieve and maintain salary equity and racial and gender diversity at all levels.
85 ntributions of TEK to research and to ensure equity and self-determination for Tribal nations who par
86 scheme in the world, and has improved health equity and service access.
87 these efforts must be based on principles of equity and social justice.
88 ealth at younger ages is critical for health equity and that policies to control cancer and CVD may h
89  a case study to examine the tension between equity and utility in multiorgan allocation.
90 nts, which raise ethical questions regarding equity and utility.
91 commits to developing additional targets for equity and well-being to accompany this overarching Impa
92 ing as well as shifting between commodities, equities, and bonds to take advantage of increased expec
93 ut the effect on clinical quality, coverage, equity, and cost-effectiveness is inadequate.
94 als to enhance and facility gender equality, equity, and diversity in transplantation.
95 c challenges as well as overwhelming health, equity, and economic benefits.
96 adequate incentives for resource efficiency, equity, and environmental protection.
97 ontrol which we discuss here: food security, equity, and implications of the nitrogen cascade.
98 , thereby creating a future where diversity, equity, and inclusion are expected, not requested.
99 ntly pledged their commitments to diversity, equity, and inclusion in examining institutional discrim
100 o, a future where contributing to diversity, equity, and inclusion is fully integrated into the core
101  laudable steps toward increasing diversity, equity, and inclusion within the society, including part
102 ility to address other aspects of diversity, equity, and inclusion.
103 ulations that expand access to care, improve equity, and pool financial risks.
104 child health interventions to high coverage, equity, and quality, as well as interventions to address
105 countability and results in health, improved equity, and rights-based approaches to development chall
106 In this first paper of the Series on health, equity, and women's cancers, we describe the burden of b
107  science could be utilized to advance health equity; and (4) foster early stage investigator career s
108 ment of Epidemiology's Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, Anti-Racism, and Science (Epi IDEAS) Working Gro
109 equire a culturally cognizant, pro-poor, pro-equity approach.
110 l health services, financial protection, and equity, are highlighted.
111 estimate the impact on IHD burden and health equity, as well as the cost-effectiveness of a national
112                                      Private equity-backed acquisitions of ophthalmology and optometr
113                        Additionally, private equity-backed platform companies have developed both reg
114 er, beliefs about the partner's appetite for equity, beliefs about the partner's model of their partn
115 cted ICU length of stay allows for increased equity between patients with only minimum losses of effi
116 w the literature documenting challenges with equity broadly in medicine and specifically in infectiou
117 iversity counterintuitively can work against equity building initiatives.
118        The current policy gives the greatest equity but causes inefficiency in unit bed-flow (0.5033
119 s collaborative approach will improve health equity by building communities that promote health rathe
120 t detect systematic differences in deworming equity by sex.
121  its commitment to diversity, inclusion, and equity by: 1) integrating this priority on all agendas;
122 Bangladesh offers lessons such as how gender equity can improve health outcomes, how health innovatio
123  the ancillary benefits to health and health equity (co-benefits) of sustainable development policies
124 onceive of health privacy; the importance of equity, consent, and patient governance in data collecti
125 e conceptualization of health equity and how equity considerations in US public health practice have
126 ld improve efficiency, but raise ethical and equity considerations.
127 miology of health benefits; d) diversity and equity considerations; e) technological nature; f) econo
128 gnificance of both methods for two different equity datasets.
129 an be achieved by organizations that promote equity, diversity, and inclusion across several domains
130                                        Thus, equity effects on effort can have consequences for the e
131 mplications for policy-makers concerned with equity, efficiency and the provisioning of public goods.
132 approaches to allocating DAH that prioritise equity, efficiency, and sustainability, particularly thr
133              Our results highlight potential equity-efficiency trade-offs in designing air quality po
134 hy People is an emphasis on achieving health equity, eliminating health disparities, and improving he
135  the different conceptions of efficiency and equity employed by each model and evaluate whether EOFI
136 -makers deal with the challenge of balancing equity (equal treatment for all) and efficacy (treating
137  -0.11], p < 0.001); attitude towards gender equity (ES [95% CI] = 0.53 [0.27-0.79] versus 0.23 [0.10
138 uld continually evaluate and seek to improve equity, even within systems that provide free care.
139 n coverage, strategies of health programmes, equity, evidence, accountability, and global leadership.
140  effective interventions that promote health equity, few have been translated and implemented consist
141 funds, hedge funds, real estate, and private equity, fewer than 1.3% are managed by women and people
142 cians and medical groups acquired by private equity firms between 2013 and 2016.
143 011-15 in 14 countries and one province): an equity-focused approach that prioritises the most depriv
144 ty of the interventions, is needed to ensure equity for all children thriving.
145 timely action toward achieving cancer health equity for all.
146 makes a series of recommendations to achieve equity for LGBT individuals in the health care system.
147 geted reduction of disease burden, increased equity for marginalized populations, and progress on dev
148 address local unmet needs, aiming to provide equity for patients, improve patient experience and decr
149 es issues related to health care quality and equity for women, including minority population subgroup
150  affordable interventions to help bridge the equity gap in the management of cardiometabolic risk fac
151 rics and data analysis to identify workforce equity gaps and pursue opportunities to close them.
152 egies should proactively focus on addressing equity gaps in COVID-19 testing to improve equity of the
153 rates across high-income countries and large equity gaps within high-income countries persist.
154  health system heterogeneity and exacerbated equity gaps.
155 uer"-which may be at odds with environmental equity goals.
156                           Research on health equity has focused on documenting health care disparitie
157  average investment returns of 8.9-11.4% for equity holders and 5-8% for 'research-backed obligation'
158                         The HIV Organ Policy Equity (HOPE) Act now allows transplantation of organs f
159 positive donors through the HIV Organ Policy Equity (HOPE) Act.
160 a's (IDSA) Inclusion, Diversity, Access, and Equity (IDA&E) initiative and discusses the long-term go
161 omotion of inclusion, diversity, access, and equity (IDA&E) is critical to harnessing the full range
162                       Crucial issues are the equity implications of different financing mechanisms, a
163 ant outcomes versus diagnostic accuracy, the equity implications of evaluating health impact of diagn
164                      Further analysis of the equity implications of following the suggested pathway r
165    Greater efforts should be made to address equity in academic ID.
166 for public health efforts aimed at improving equity in access to effective treatments and care for ju
167 n egalitarian plan that maximizes geographic equity in access to interventions.
168         Here, we describe these challenges - equity in access to kidney failure care, avoiding futile
169                      Disparities that affect equity in access to kidney transplantation for patients
170 al Model as a compelling solution to improve equity in access to kidney transplantation.
171 licy was implemented in June 2013 to improve equity in access to liver transplantation (LT) between p
172 s-sectional survey in 2011, we also examined equity in access to maternity care in 42 poor counties i
173 ultural and psychosocial factors may enhance equity in access to transplantation.
174 er priority should be given to socioeconomic equity in assessments of HIV-testing programmes.
175     We then discuss specific ways to address equity in core public health functions, provide examples
176 erms of health, wellbeing, productivity, and equity in current and future generations.
177                     Interventions to improve equity in decision-making and control within dyadic part
178 esearch institutions can develop to increase equity in faculty hiring and promotion to address the la
179                 How do we remove barriers to equity in field courses, to make them engines for inclus
180 This study aims to measure both coverage and equity in global, national, and subnational deworming to
181 sed as an alternative measurement to monitor equity in health services.
182  care, and for additional investment towards equity in health-care services.
183 ons in instructional strategies can increase equity in higher education.
184 sion about inclusion, diversity, access, and equity in infectious diseases.
185 nce panel for calculation of CPRA to improve equity in kidney transplant allocation.
186 intervention increased referral and improved equity in kidney transplant referral for patients on dia
187  in paired kidney exchanges may increase sex equity in LDKT.
188 r period, and they support the importance of equity in life-course exposures for reducing racial disp
189 xplore root causes for this difference, with equity in opportunity and parity in clinical activity st
190  a federal mandate, which demands geographic equity in organ allocation for transplantation.
191 s accompanied by increased racial and ethnic equity in performance rates both within and among U.S. h
192                    Future efforts to promote equity in preemptive transplant should address the criti
193 ays to Prevention Workshop: Achieving Health Equity in Preventive Services to assess the available ev
194 ogress in cardiovascular trial participation equity in recent years, especially among women, due in p
195 imed to better inform efforts towards global equity in sexual and reproductive health and rights.
196 d conservation, where conservation goals and equity in social outcomes are maximized while overall co
197 ive repercussions on community coherence and equity in societies with a strong communal ethic.
198 ation of the Alliance to Catalyze Change for Equity in STEM Success (ACCESS), a meta-organization bri
199 den of TB more effectively and ensure gender equity in TB care.
200 s these disparities should focus on ensuring equity in testing recommendations.
201             The strategies needed to promote equity in the cardiovascular health of African Americans
202 d Anne Barnhill highlight the need to ensure equity in the proposed Sustainable Development Goals.
203          The goal was to explore how greater equity in the work force could be promoted for these gro
204 moting (a) agency in career development, (b) equity in the work force, and (c) well-being in work and
205 ry associations can prioritize racial/ethnic equity in their governance and provides specific steps f
206 ld have stated: 'D.R.L. consults for and has equity in Vedanta Biosciences.' The original Letter has
207 nding on how one defines and measures social equity, including direct (linear) and no trade-off.
208           We examined trends in coverage and equity index across countries, within countries, and ove
209 hy, wealth, and sex with incorporation of an equity index to complement the conventional public healt
210 y, wealth quintile, and sex, and computed an equity index.
211 emain in our understanding, most notably how equity influences probability of conservation success, i
212 ory exists for how to explicitly incorporate equity into conservation planning and prioritization.
213 nt, and makes questions of intergenerational equity into explicit design choices.
214 of health equity and options for integrating equity into public health practice.
215 conomic output and opportunities for private equity investment were identified.
216      Trade-offs increase when distributional equity is considered as an additional criterion, especia
217 ctives were to (i) identify potential gender equity issues within the transplantation workforce; (ii)
218 es, the authors argue that beyond ethics and equity issues, it makes economic sense to invest in glob
219 ght in an intersectional manner that centers equity, justice, and the creation of jobs.
220 amining research from a racial/socioeconomic equity lens.
221 amining research from a racial/socioeconomic equity lens.
222 gate the negative effects of foreign private equity, local debt financing increased economic output a
223 wever, it balances this with greater patient equity (maximum waiting time could be shortened by 4 day
224  private and public health systems; ensuring equity; meeting the demands for more human resources; ma
225 y free of conflicts of interest, the private equity model is particularly susceptible to approaches t
226                                       First, equity must be integral to the implementation of technol
227 (n=17), efficiency (n=6), timeliness (n=16), equity (n=2), and patient-centeredness (n=1) of injury c
228 ur nation and corresponding economic, health equity, national security, and sustainability implicatio
229 e need to consider social comparisons, local equity norms, and gender in environmental policies using
230 conflict with humanitarian and global health equity objectives.
231 omic position, compromises effectiveness and equity.Objectives: To compare the effect of a targeted,
232           Care protocols designed to improve equity of access to care and outcomes are required, espe
233   This project is a community-level study of equity of access to eye health services for Indigenous A
234 s, effective management of risk factors, and equity of access to high-quality acute stroke care and r
235 e focused on three main dimensions: quality, equity of access, and efficiency.
236 ust be balanced against the need to maintain equity of access, including for the increasing number of
237 group, it is unclear whether improvements in equity of care have accompanied aggregate improvements i
238 ng collaborative efforts and solidarity, the equity of chance can be achieved for patients with cance
239 ing, which are essential for the quality and equity of China's health-care system.
240 hening leadership, increasing the volume and equity of community outreach, improving surgical quality
241 ightened efforts to improve the standard and equity of diabetes mellitus care in women and men.
242 ting both public and private sectors--of the equity of health-system financing and service use in Gha
243  evaluation framework to assess coverage and equity of interventions along the continuum of care, hea
244 th Surveys to analyse trends in coverage and equity of key reproductive, maternal health, and child h
245 g equity gaps in COVID-19 testing to improve equity of the overall response.
246                                          The equity of the tax could be further improved if the tax r
247                   We examined the impact and equity of this scheme on LARC uptake and abortions.
248 ghlights concrete steps needed to ensure the equity of transplant policy.
249 countries from land-based carbon policies on equity or food security grounds may result in significan
250                               The systematic equity orientation of health and socioeconomic developme
251 Further progress in sustaining and enhancing equity-oriented achievements in health hinges on stronge
252  discusses methodological considerations for equity-oriented monitoring of UHC, and proposes recommen
253 urse set by a new government set into motion equity-oriented national policies focusing on social coh
254                   These actions will support equity-oriented progressive realization of UHC.
255  stakeholders pursuing women-centred, gender-equity-oriented, highly focused health programmes in fam
256 ndly impacts public health and environmental equity, our results have important implications for how
257 ts and programs to examine changes in gender equity over the last 15 years.
258 ifically, about the growing trend of private equity ownership and consolidation of for-profit IRBs.
259 ation strategies by synthesizing utility and equity perspectives.
260 tudy, as part of the larger HIV Organ Policy Equity pilot study, HIV-positive to HIV-positive kidney
261 on development might be necessary to achieve equity-positive smoking cessation outcomes.
262 or redistribution, there is a clear role for equity principles in guiding the development of supply s
263 .4612 days), it did so at expense of patient equity prolonging surgical waiting time by as much as 21
264                    A major initiative of the Equity, Quality, and Inclusion in Trauma Surgery Practic
265 the intervention, and implications to health equity, recommendations were made for or against specifi
266               In this pursuit, cancer health equity remains the guiding institutional principle that
267 igating bias and achieving greater levels of equity, representation, and excellence in clinical pract
268 dditional criterion, especially under higher equity requirements.
269                                           An equity research analyst's job is to determine whether th
270           Veterans Affairs Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion.
271 p were to: (1) present an overview of health equity research, including areas which require ongoing i
272 tioned from a postdoc position to working in equity research.
273 olitical and technical commitment to improve equity-sensitive information systems is required to moni
274 services reaching high coverage (>/=85%) and equity (socioeconomic status difference 13-14%), but low
275 h coverage, underpinned by the principles of equity, solidarity, and collective action to overcome so
276  equality, including through national health equity strategies and, more boldly still, advancing the
277                    Use of fees as part of an equity strategy will likely disadvantage the poorest pat
278 Disaggregation of the indicators by the main equity stratifiers is critical to monitor progress in al
279 hieving universal health coverage to enhance equity substantially, and led to quantifiable and benefi
280                                 We show that equity tends to trade off nonlinearly with the potential
281                                          The equity theme covers research on social class and race/et
282 edge, the first set of neuronal evidence for equity theory and suggest that people distinguish betwee
283 des an evolutionary foundation for classical equity theory, and it has implications for the origin of
284                            To achieve health equity, there is a dire need to implement and disseminat
285  coverage and contribute to advancing global equity through income redistribution, from healthy popul
286  need, and meet emerging challenges; promote equity through universal coverage of quality maternal he
287 delivery of improvements in child health and equity throughout Europe).
288 munity to increase accessibility and promote equity to all patients awaiting kidney transplantation.
289 ce of global health and considerations about equity to the discipline, brings into sharp focus our en
290 (ie, integration, financing, resilience, and equity) to reimagine governance, policies, and investmen
291 vation outcomes can be possible with greater equity, to a point.
292                  Despite this impressive pro-equity trajectory, there remain significant residual ine
293          Issues of trust, accountability and equity underpin Indigenous critiques of genetic research
294  understand its design, safety, efficacy and equity, validation, and liability, as well as how its da
295 e short allele of this gene invested less in equities, were less engaged in actively making investmen
296                                         True equity will at the very least require improvement in boy
297  To advance our knowledge and achieve health equity with respect to palliative care in patient groups
298 ities related to each agent's preference for equity with their partner, beliefs about the partner's a
299 outcomes toward achievement of cancer health equity, with a focus on improving equitable access to ca
300 also thrive and that recommendations promote equity, with no child left behind.

 
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