PerspectivesThinking in time: does health policy need history as evidence?
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Complex cases – Complex representations of problems
2020, International Journal of Drug PolicyCitation Excerpt :These services are constituted by different types of policies, which often represent diverse ideas on the nature of these problems, on why and how to intervene, and on what the outcome of the intervention is expected to be. In existing research, policies have mainly been studied separately, for example, by focusing on policies related to health, employment, or drug or alcohol issues (see for example Berridge, 2010; Elmeland & Kolind, 2012; Houborg, 2012; O´Higgins, 2001; Teghtsoonian, 2009; Thom, 2005; Vohnsen, 2017). The overlaps or discrepancies between different policies are less studied (Benoit, 2003; Dorn, 1995; Houborg & Bjerge, 2011).
Innovation in population health intervention research: A historical perspective
2019, Bioarchaeology of Marginalized PeopleWhy policy needs history (and historians)
2018, Health Economics, Policy and LawTraces of epidemics in the fringes of pain: memory of Spanish flu from a local history perspective, Botucatu (São Paulo state), 1918
2023, Historia, Ciencias, Saude - ManguinhosVermin, Victims and Disease: British Debates over Bovine Tuberculosis and Badgers
2019, Vermin, Victims and Disease: British Debates over Bovine Tuberculosis and BadgersThe importance of the historical perspective for social thinking in health: The contributions of Madel Luz and Emerson Merhy
2018, Historia, Ciencias, Saude - Manguinhos
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