"Across the U.S. people are trying to reduce inequities in how environment affects physical well-being".
"As an emergency room physician in Washington, D.C., it didn’t take long for Leana Wen to notice a pattern: Patients making repeat visits to the ER, wheezing and coughing from asthma exacerbations or suffering from lead poisoning, conditions that most often afflict those living in low-income neighborhoods.
She helped soothe her patients’ immediate needs, but she was acutely aware she was only providing temporary relief, leaving the root causes unchecked — and a gap in the health of residents living in the city’s poorest ZIP codes versus those in the wealthiest. She wanted the opportunity to intervene earlier in those ER patients’ lives.
'If a child is lead poisoned to start with … it’s hurting that child’s chances before they begin,' she says."
Sheila Mulrooney Eldred reports for Ensia August 25, 2016.
"Health And Neighborhood Are Too Often Linked." Change Effort Mounted
Source: Ensia, 08/26/2016