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What does it take to have a healthy community? Exploring the role of social infrastructure in shaping public health

By: Moldavanova, Alisa V. Daley, Dorothy M. and Pierce, John C.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: The American Review Public Administration Description: 55(5), Jul, 2025: p.396-414.Subject(s): Community health, Social infrastructure, U.s. counties, Social determinates of health In: The American Review Public AdministrationSummary: Despite significant health care spending, health in the United States is declining. This paradox adds urgency to developing a better understanding of the factors shaping community health. While substantial research has focused on health care systems in order to understand health outcomes, the Social Determinants of Health framework argues for a more integrative and dynamic approach to public health. We extend that framework by examining the association between three pillars of social infrastructure (social capital, human capital, and creative cultural capital) and community health. Relying on a variety of U.S. county data sources, we find that the heightened presence of these pillars of social infrastructure is associated with better community health.-Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/02750740251346805
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
55(5), Jul, 2025: p.396-414 Available AR137581

Despite significant health care spending, health in the United States is declining. This paradox adds urgency to developing a better understanding of the factors shaping community health. While substantial research has focused on health care systems in order to understand health outcomes, the Social Determinants of Health framework argues for a more integrative and dynamic approach to public health. We extend that framework by examining the association between three pillars of social infrastructure (social capital, human capital, and creative cultural capital) and community health. Relying on a variety of U.S. county data sources, we find that the heightened presence of these pillars of social infrastructure is associated with better community health.-Reproduced

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/02750740251346805

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