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5 Closing Remarks
Pages 43-46

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From page 43...
... The Roundtable on Population Health Improvement has highlighted resources, goals and metrics, science-informed interventions, policies, communication and movement building, and partnerships as key drivers of population health improvement. However, finances loom large, and 1 The comments in this section refer solely to remarks made by David Kindig of the Uni versity of Wisconsin–Madison and are not necessarily endorsed or verified by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, and they should not be construed as reflecting any group consensus.
From page 44...
... The roundtable mission states that population health improvement, including health equity, will require more robust national and commu nity-based actions and dependable resources.2 To develop more depend able streams of financial resources, Kindig said that it is necessary to move beyond grants and short-term appropriations. He mentioned the funding of crop subsidies, mortgage interest deductions, and Medicare medical education payments as examples of dependable funding formulas.
From page 45...
... CLOSING REMARKS 45 respond to.3 Results would then be summarized in a presentation on the final day of the IAPHS meeting. 3 The survey can be viewed at https://iaphs.org/population-health-survey (accessed July 27, 2020)


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