Abstract
Health and development have a symbiotic relationship that impacts human potential as well as community and national capabilities. Although the relationship between health and development has been discussed for centuries, there is no concrete agreement as to which deserves primacy as a key to improving well-being. A healthy population can contribute to economic growth, and economic growth provides financial resources that can, in turn, be invested in inputs to health and overall well-being. The improvement in the wealth and health of much of the world’s population that occurred from the 18th to the 21st century serves as an example of the interaction between the health of a population, the welfare of a state, and overall well-being. Parts of the Americas, Australia, Europe and China realized large improvements in well-being but regions such as Africa and South East Asia lagged behind. Although various theories attempt to explain the outcomes, no single theory has been able to fully explain both the improvement and the divergence. Rather, the theories offer different perspectives in terms of the impact and interaction of the growth in national wealth and human health, and describe how geographic location and political institutions inform national needs and capabilities . These, in turn, inform policy options that direct the development trajectory. This chapter examines the theoretical and empirical roots of the health and development paradigm, and introduces standard measurements used to gauge change in health and development outcomes.
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- 1.
European nations and the United States are the subject of the discussion of colonization and Empire.
- 2.
Table 1.1 also shows a decrease in both female and male life expectancy in England and Wales from the period of 1920–1929 but this may be an artifice of combining two data sources. The data for 1920 forward includes all of the United Kingdom.
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Johnson, S.A. (2017). Two Hundred Years of Change in Health and Development. In: Challenges in Health and Development. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-53204-2_1
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