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Full bibliography 237 resources
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Summary. Describes how publicly disclosing drug company payments to physicians affects trust.
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Summary. This essay outlines the webs of close relationships that opioid companies created with doctors, professional associations, universities, academic medical centers, and public health NGOs. The essay argues that these relationships exacerbated the opioid crisis.
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Summary. Stanford University Professor Rob Reich examined the role of philanthropy in a democracy.
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Summary. The company planted the seeds of a public health crisis by marketing to millennials, who had low smoking rates, and it ignored evidence that teenagers were using its products.
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Summary. This detailed introduction not only outlines our approach in the book - including our use of client narratives and behavioral economics - it also includes a historical summary of housing policy in the U.S. over the past century and the evolution of the American Dream. We highlight stories of homeowners - mostly our clients -- and communities that have not recovered from the 2008 foreclosure crisis.
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Summary. Describes the effects of publicly disclosing that physicians receive money from drug companies.
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Summary. This book explores the systemic effects of public-private partnerships on public health. Focusing on partnerships involving the food and soda industries, the book argues that these relationships undermine public health and imperil the integrity of public health agencies, research universities, and public health NGOs. The default relationship with industry actors, the book argues, should be separation, not collaboration.
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- Between 2000 and 2025 (230)
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