5 February 2002

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All is not fair in the Cape

A few kilometres from the centre of one of the most beautiful cities in the world, thousands of people still do not have easy access to basic services such as water, electricity, job opportunities, housing and sanitation. Cape Town is known for it's mansions priced at millions of rands, but a lesser known side are the sprawling informal  settlements where disease is part of life. In an effort to bring about change and ensure the fair distribution of resources, researchers and policy makers in Cape Town have implemented the Equity Gauge. The gauge uses health indicators such as the infant death rate to highlight the inequitable distribution of these basic services and guide future planning and policy.
Read More » All is not fair in the Cape

Social development restored health in Britain’s 19th century urban ghettos long before the arrival of drugs

Studies show that the main causes of death in 19th century England and Wales were essentially the same infectious diseases that are killing children in underdeveloped countries today: diarrhoea, measles, and respiratory infections such as pneumonia, tuberculosis, and whooping cough.
Read More » Social development restored health in Britain’s 19th century urban ghettos long before the arrival of drugs

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