Lancet
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Food insecurity is an increasingly important public health concern in high-income countries following the 2008 global financial crash, and recently with the COVID-19 pandemic. Food insecurity has been understood as a highly gendered issue, affecting more women than men. As women have more complex nutritional needs because of their menstrual cycle, pregnancy, and breastfeeding, the nutritional impact of food insecurity is also greater for women than for men. This systematic review aims to explore pregnant women's experiences of food insecurity in high-income countries and to understand how food insecurity affects their health, wellbeing, diet, and nutrition. ⋯ None.
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The combined incidence rate of all cancers is higher in deprived population groups than in least-deprived groups. Approximately 40% of cancers in the UK are attributable to lifestyle risk factors, such as smoking and obesity, which are also socioeconomically patterned, and which suggests that public health strategies for primary cancer prevention might need to be tailored according to socioeconomic status. The World Cancer Research Fund and American Institute for Cancer Research's Cancer Prevention Recommendations aim to reduce cancer risk. We investigated socioeconomic status differences in adherence to these recommendations within the cohort of the UK Biobank prospective study. ⋯ Wereld Kanker Onderzoek Fonds (grant number IIG_FULL_2020_032), as part of the World Cancer Research Fund International Grant Programme.
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Observational Study
Changes in diet and physical activity after a pilot intervention to tackle childhood obesity in a deprived inner-London community: an observational cohort study.
Local authorities in England are uniquely positioned to modify obesogenic local environments contributing to childhood obesity. Evaluating the effects of local authority-led, community-wide approaches is challenging. This study examines changes in diet and physical activity in children aged 6-11 years after a 4-year, complex, community-based, pilot intervention in Golborne, one of the most deprived areas in London. ⋯ Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. CB is funded by the School for Public Health Research of the National Institute for Health and Care Research (grant reference PD-SPH-2015). CJ is partly funded by Public Health at the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea and by the National Institute for Health and Care Research Applied Research Collaborative. The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the National Institute for Health and Care Research or the Department of Health and Social Care.
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Observational Study
Outsourcing and children's social care services: an observational longitudinal analysis of inspection outcomes among English children's homes and local authorities.
Most children's social care services in England are operated by for-profit companies, but the implications of this development are not well understood. We aimed to evaluate the associations between for-profit outsourcing and quality of service provision among local authorities and children's home providers in England, UK. ⋯ The John Fell Fund and the Carlsberg Foundation.
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Socioeconomic inequalities in common mental health disorders (CMDs) cut across each step in the cascade of care: less affluent individuals have a higher lifetime prevalence of CMDs, are less likely to utilise treatment, and less likely to perceive the treatment as helpful when they do receive it. Here, I test whether such socioeconomic inequalities exist globally across 113 countries and, additionally, which psychological and country-level factors are associated with the three health outcomes (ie, CMD prevalence, treatment utilisation, and helpfulness). ⋯ Economic and Social Research Council.