Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
C.A. Tisdell
Economics of Environmental Conservation
Development Cooperation Information Department
First Steps – Policy Memorandum on Children in Developing Countries
WRI and IIED
World Resources
World Health Organization
Health and Economic Development
G. Brundtland, M. Khalid (1987)
Our common future
United Nations Environmental Programme
Environmental Data Report
J. Nriagu (1990)
Global Metal Pollution: Poisoning the Biosphere?Environment, 32
World Health Organization
Recent trends in causes of death
J. Leowski (1986)
Mortality from acute respiratory infections in children under 5 years of age: global estimates.World health statistics quarterly. Rapport trimestriel de statistiques sanitaires mondiales, 39 2
C. Warner (1982)
Guidelines on risk management and accident prevention in the chemical industry
A. King
The African problematique: global dimensions and regional prospects
J. Mcneely (1989)
World Resources 1988–89Environment, 31
P.H. Hoeffel
Famine, harvests co‐exist in Sahel
G. Torrigiani, W. Parra
Communicable diseases
C. Castillo‐Salgado, V. Navarro
Health promotion in health policy formulation
B. Dick (1986)
Supplementary feeding for refugees and other displaced communities - questioning current orthodoxy.Disasters, 10 1
Environment (1990)
Environmental auditing : report of a United Nations Environment Programme/Industry and Environment (UNEP/IEO) Workshop, Paris, 10-11 January 1989
C. Viedma (1988)
A health and nutrition atlas--food for thought.World health
J. Grant (1986)
The State of the World's Children 1986Medical Education, 20
World Media Institute
Tribute to Our Common Future
J. Bajaj (1994)
MULTIPROFESSIONAL EDUCATION AS AN ESSENTIAL COMPONENT OF EFFECTIVE HEALTH SERVICESMedical Education, 28
B. Gilland, G. Higgins, A. Kassam, L. Naiken, G. Fischer, M. Shah, P. Harrison (1984)
Potential Population Supporting Capacities of Lands in the Developing World
World Health Organization
Four Decades of Achievement – Highlights of the Work of WHO
Demographic, social, epidemiologic and political changes occur simultaneously with macroeconomic changes. In the health sector, for instance, the progress evident in health status in several nations seems to correspond globally with the number of people living below sustenance level, health and nutritional requirements in the past three decades. Increasing demand for services beyond the coping competence of many non‐industrialized governments have rendered the poverty‐ridden population helpless in the face of adversity. In several of the poorest nations, the structural adjustment programme with its attendant myopic targets and constricted economic centralization has intensified demand for changes at the social and political strata. The structural adjustment rate in all sectors of public services which would create a meaningful and realizable institutional change and economic benefit for both government and people has been seriously retarded in non‐industrialized countries, especially the poor ones, in contrast to the more prosperous countries.
Environmental Management and Health – Emerald Publishing
Published: Oct 1, 1995
Keywords: Developing countries; Health; Sustainable development
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.