The Inequality Paradox: The Population Approach and Vulnerable Populations
Katherine L. Frohlich 1*Louise Potvin 2
1 University of Montreal 2 Université de Montréal
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: katherine.frohlich{at}umontreal.ca.
Abstract
Using the concept of vulnerable populations, we examine howdisparities in health may be exacerbated by population-approachinterventions.
We show, from an etiologic perspective,how life-courseepidemiology, the concentration of risk factors, and the conceptof fundamental causes of diseases may explain the differentialcapacity, throughout the risk-exposure distribution, to transformresources provided through population-approach interventionsinto health. From an intervention perspective, we argue thatpopulation-approach interventions may be compromised by inconsistenciesbetween the social and cultural assumptions of public healthpractitioners and targeted groups.
We propose some interventionprinciples to mitigate the health disparities associated withpopulation-approach interventions.
Key Words:
Community Health, Health Promotion, Socioeconomic Factors, Tobacco
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