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The group blog of The American Prospect

A HEALTHY POPULACE.

We know what makes for an unhealthy country, but this month Foreign Policy takes a look at five examples of countries that have a healthy populace. A lot of the key strengths come from policy initiatives: government-sponsored pre-work workouts in Japan; extensive, government-funded prenatal and natal care in Iceland as well as three months of paid professional leave for both parents; holistic social care in Sweden, which includes comprehensive health care and safer streets for evening strolls; and a high number of doctors per-capita in Cuba. The biggest threat to the health of three of the five they list: the importation of the American diet.

The addition of fitness programs, family leave, and safe streets is important. Sure, we can have all the health care in the world here, but our entire way of life is set up to make us unhealthy. Our work hours are longer than most of other developed countries. Paid maternity leave isn't guaranteed, and paternity leave is virtually non-existent. Walking and biking are not only not supported, but they're actively undermined as feasible activities in most areas. And even where you can walk or bike, it's often unsafe or unpleasant. We subsidize cheap, unhealthy food. So even with a shiny, new, comprehensive, universal health care plan in place sometime soon, it's going to take a lot more to make Americans healthy.

--Kate Sheppard



COMMENTS

After visiting Scotland I got impression that they have obesity and nutrition problem like in rural USA. Traditional Scottish food does not seem to be of much help. The gasoline was at ca. $7.50 per gallon, and the locals seem to walk more, and they use trains much more.

Walking and biking outside downtowns in rural USA --- not for the faint hearted. A bunch of street light around the place I live is sensor-operated, needless to say, pedestrians and bicyclists are beneath notice for those sensors. So, yeah! they put some buttons on poles. One pole is placed several feet away from a high guardrail --- on the other side, of course. It is really pathetic what some efforts to benefit bicyclists and pedestrains add to. My favorite -- whimsical sidewalks to nowhere, next to important streets with no sidewalks.

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