Unnatural causes is inequality making us sick?
(DVD)

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Published
[San Francisco, Calif.] : California Newsreel, c2008.
Status

Description

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LocationCall NumberStatus
Eldred-Sunshine Hall Free Library - Adult Non-Entertainment DVDHEALTHOn Shelf
Fallsburg Library - Adult Non-Entertainment DVDDVD 1282 U DOCUMENTARYOn Shelf
Liberty Public Library - Adult Non-Entertainment DVDDVD 362.1097 UNN 1454On Shelf
Monticello-Ethelbert B. Crawford Public Library - Adult DVD (any type)DVD 362.1042 UNNOn Shelf
Orangeburg Library - Adult Non-Entertainment DVDDVD DOC 306 UNNATOn Shelf
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Published
[San Francisco, Calif.] : California Newsreel, c2008.
Format
DVD
Physical Desc
1 videodisc (236 min.) : sd., col. ; 4 3/4 in.
Language
English

Notes

General Note
Originally produced for American public television in 2008.
General Note
Container insert includes summaries and complete contents of each episode.
Participants/Performers
Narrator, Llewellyn M. Smith.
Description
A four-hour documentary series arguing that "health and longevity are correlated with socioeconomic status, people of color face an additional health burden, and our health and well-being are tied to policies that promote economic and social justice. Each of the half-hour program segments, set in different racial/ethnic communities, provides a deeper exploration of the ways in which social conditions affect population health and how some communities are extending their lives be improving them"--Container insert.
Description
In sickness and in wealth: "What connections exist between healthy bodies, healthy bank accounts and skin color? Follow four individuals from different walks of life to see how their position in society, shaped by social policies and public priorities, affects their health"--Container insert.
Description
When the bough breaks: "African American infant mortality rates remain twice as high as for white Americans. African American mothers with college degrees or higher face the same risk of having low birth-weight babies as white women who haven't finished high school. How might the chronic stress of racism over the life course become embedded in our bodies and increase risks?"--Container insert.
Description
Becoming American: "Recent Mexican immigrants tend to be healthier than the average American. But those health advantages erode the longer they've been here. What causes health to worsen as immigrants become American? What can we all learn about improved well-being from new immigrant communities?"--Container insert.
Description
Bad sugar: "O'odham Indians, living on reservations in southern Arizona, have perhaps the highest rate of Type 2 diabetes in the world. Some researchers see this as the literal 'embodiment' of decades of poverty, oppression, and loss. A new approach suggests that communities may regain control over their health if they can regain control over their futures"--Container insert.
Description
Place matters: "Increasingly, recent Southeast Asian immigrants, along with Latinos, are moving into long-neglected African American urban neighborhoods, and now their health is being eroded as a result. What policies and investment decisions create living environments that harm, or enhance, the health of residents? What actions can make a difference?"--Container insert.
Description
Collateral damage: "In the Marshall Islands, local populations have been displaced from their traditional way of life by the American military presence and globalization. Now they must contend with the worst of the 'developing' and industrialized worlds: infectious diseases such as tuberculosis due to crowded living conditions, and extreme poverty and chronic disease, stemming in part from the stress of dislocation and loss"--Container insert.
Description
Not just a paycheck: "Residents of Western Michigan struggle against depression, domestic violence and higher rates of heart disease and diabetes after the largest refrigerator factory in the country shuts down. Ironically, the plant is owned by a company in Sweden, where mass layoffs, far from devastating lives, are relatively benign because of government policies that protect and retrain workers"--Container insert.
Language
In English or dubbed Spanish.
Language
Closed-captioned.

Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Adelman, L., & Smith, L. (2008). Unnatural causes: is inequality making us sick? . California Newsreel.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Adelman, Larry and Llewellyn. Smith. 2008. Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making Us Sick?. California Newsreel.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Adelman, Larry and Llewellyn. Smith. Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making Us Sick? California Newsreel, 2008.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Adelman, Larry., and Llewellyn Smith. Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making Us Sick? California Newsreel, 2008.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.