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Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: To improve men’s health, treat the cause not just the illness Whichever way you look at it, mens health in Australia is uniformly worse than womens. Men die, on average, five years earlier than women born at the same time and are likely to experience more health complaints throughout their life. This is despite years of well-executed campaigns designed to motivate men to reduce risky behaviours: cut down on booze, quit smoking, eat healthily and drive safely. But viewing barriers to good health simply as behaviours that must be dealt with overlooks the broader environment of mens lives the causes of the causes of poor health. The Commonwealth Governments 2010 National Male Health Policy marked a promising departure from this traditional view of mens health. For the first time, policy makers acknowledged the impact of life factors income, relationships, food, housing, family life, transportation and stress on mens overall health. What we need now is for this policy shift to translate to changes in health service delivery and health promotion initiatives. Rather than just treating illness, health professionals must consider how a persons life road map influences the current and future state of their health. Currently, if a man presents to his doctor with chest pains, hell immediately have checks on the health of his heart. But subsequent assessments are also needed to determine whether life factors are also to blame. If demands at work are layered with relationship stress, and a two-hour daily commute prevents him from seeing his kids before bedtime, his physical health may well be a product of ongoing stressors in his life. A treatment plan which addresses these stressors, is therefore likely to have more impact on his health than any technological or medical initiative alone. This has been done in the Health Leads program in the United States, where physicians prescribe food, housing, health insurance, job training, fuel assistance, or other resources for their patients as routinely as they do medication. Results show this approach is relieving the burden on doctors and leading to better patient outcomes than traditional prescriptive approaches to care. We still have a long way to go in Australia but one organisation the Mens Shed movement is making ground. The sheds are a place for men of all ages to informally meet and collaborate on projects such as restoring furniture, fixing bicycles or making kids' cubby houses. The sheds engage men in positive environments that promote their health and well-being with feelings of connectedness, satisfaction of achievement and reward for their contributions. In the sheds, men can communicate shoulder to shoulder, while working on project, rather than talk to each other face to face. This reflects the way most men prefer to communicate and avoids perceptions of being lectured, admonished or disciplined. The Shed at Mount Druitt in Western Sydney is another example of a health program considering the broader context of mens lives in this case, in an effort to prevent suicide. The Shed offers a safe place where men can socialise with each other and connect with local services such as Legal Aid, housing providers and Centrelink. Our own research has shown that suicide is often the last resort for men who have lost and havent been able to regain the factors that kept them alive. A man may lose his job, which may lead to financial problems that cause him to lose his house and damage his relationships. He may turn to alcohol, drugs or gambling and, progressively, see his reasons to live diminish. Health-giving environmental factors can work both ways. Being employed, for example, is universally acknowledged as one of the most important factors in mens health outcomes. Employment offers the opportunity for achievement, income, a sense of being valued and socially connected all improving overall health and well-being. At the same time, men exposed to stress, physical danger, job insecurity, long commutes or isolation at work are as likely to have poor health outcomes as unemployed men. What counts is the overall balance. To improve the health of Australian men, we must build a culture that examines mens wellness as much as their illness.
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#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)
Let's think on this one a moment. The reason why men die earlier than women, is because we have a lot of stress in our lives. Stress makes us age faster, thus die sooner. We have a society which puts an incredible amount of stress on each and every one of us, that is coupled with horrific dietary practices, and a lack of mental stimulation. This is why we die sooner. We are not made to aspire, we are forced to persist. You want a better world? Create new reasons to live, and be a better person. Make peaceful coexistence, and benevolence profitable so that all may succeed by the sweat of their own brow. Do that, and things will improve for ALL human beings.
"Call Me Ishmael" -Ishmael, A character from the book "Moby Dick" 1851. "Call Me Fishmeal" -Osama Bin Laden, A character created by the CIA, and the world's Hide And Seek Champion 2001-2011. -Tommythemadartist
Likely can only work if money is abolished. Communities/society act like a family wherein everyone does his best in what needs to be done, facilitates the work of others rather than competing with them. No slackers or conniving parasites.
boy, that's a utopia.
From Don D's wall post concerning budget initiatives: "... and we must rebuild our infrastructure, especially the roads and bridges. The American people are gonna need a place to live under...and jump off of."
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