Fuchs V R
Milbank Mem Fund Q Health Soc. 1979 Spring;57(2):153-82.
Increases in medical resources, and access to care, do not lead to comparable decreases in either morbidity or mortality in modern nations. The number of years of schooling, rather than level of income, emerges as the surest correlate of good health, although progress in medical science and changes in productivity remain powerful influences. Family, religion, and especially government, are examined as institutions serving competing goals of security, freedom, and equality.
在现代国家,医疗资源的增加以及获得医疗服务的机会,并不会使发病率或死亡率相应降低。受教育年限,而非收入水平,是健康状况最可靠的关联因素,尽管医学进步和生产力变化仍有强大影响。家庭、宗教,尤其是政府,被视为服务于安全、自由和平等相互竞争目标的机构进行审视。