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Does the Era of Globalization Dictate a change in the Definition of Public Health?
Zaletel Kragelj, Lijana; Erzen, Ivan.
  • Zaletel Kragelj L; University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Medicine, Chair of Public Health, Zaloska cesta 4, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia.
  • Erzen I; National Institute of Public Health, Trubarjeva 2, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Zdr Varst ; 63(2): 63-65, 2024 Jun.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38517036
ABSTRACT
Globalization has a major impact on public health in all countries of the world. Unfortunately, there are attempts to treat global challenges in the field of public health separately from national ones, following the model of tropical medicine, where the focus of action was in fact primarily on the identification and control of tropical diseases. This was especially in the interest of countries that colonized certain areas in the tropical part of the world. Global health, which is to some extent the successor of tropical medicine, cannot be a separate entity. The lines between global health and public health are blurring. In essence, global health is just another aspect of public health, important both in terms of recognizing the situation and taking action to improve the situation. The problems are mostly no longer local or national, and, to a greater or lesser extent, already affect the entire population or threaten the health of future generations. Such a view of global health also requires different approaches. Of course, due to cultural and socio-economic characteristics, the field and method of work must be adapted to the specific local environment, but nevertheless, these are challenges that are present everywhere. Therefore, it is vital that we act decisively, with a united approach - regardless of where we live and at what stage of social development we are. The world has become one, so the division into public health and global public health has become meaningless.
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