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Heroic Nurse – the Last Surviving 'Angel of Bataan and Corregidor' – Passes Away
Mildred Dalton Manning, the last surviving member of a group of U.S. Army and Navy nurses taken prisoner in the Philippines at the start of ...
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This article examines the association between legal structures and population health indicators to better understand law’s contribution to community health. The authors posit that the legal infrastructure of local public health, as expressed in the exercise of local fiscal and legislative authority, affects local population health outcomes.
This study examined public health jurisdictions with at least 100,000 residents drawn from the 1998 and 2006 surveys by Mays et al. The dependent variable was premature mortality rates as reported by the Mobilize Action Toward Community Health (MATCH) database. Four independent variables were examined: home rule, county government structure, board of health power, and type of public health delivery system.
Key Findings:
These findings show the effect of poverty on premature death may be mediated by county government structure, which communities have power to change. More research is needed to understand the relationship between legal infrastructure and population health.