Sentence examples for implications of poverty from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

Another contributor raised the point about why governments should drive efforts to achieve full financial inclusion: "We need to get governments to care about the unbanked – not just because of the general social implications of poverty but also because it puts a brake on your economic growth if 25% of your population is not able to contribute".

Josephina, a mother of four, brought into bold relief the implications of poverty for women's uptake of hospital-based maternal services.

It suggests wider and more complex implications of poverty for maternal outcomes than are readily acknowledged in extant research, raising urgent need for efforts aiming to promote better maternal outcomes to be guided by a vigorous understanding of the multiplicity of ways through which women's livelihoods mediate their health outcomes.

Similar(56)

He fails to recognise the tremendous health implications of relative poverty.

Mr. Summers added, "He is an outstanding scholar of African-American political behavior and thought, as well as of the political implications of urban poverty, and his teaching and scholarship will strengthen Harvard in important areas of study".

There is, however, limited evidence of mental health implications of working poverty, despite its representing a rapidly expanding segment of impoverished populations in many developed nations.

Second, in re-framing the global discussion about NCDs, which often mistakenly focuses on 'blaming the individual' for unhealthy choices, the UN Resolution emphasises the underlying social and environmental drivers of NCDs, and their implications for poverty.

Economic costs of illness at the household level-below referred to as household costs-have strong implications for issues of poverty and equitable access to health care.

Standard approaches to assess the incidence and intensity of catastrophic expenditure and the implications for poverty estimates are described in detail by O'Donnell et al. ([ 2008]).

The latter term, which became important in the idiom of African medical research after the 1980s (Chantler 2012), references village communities with the implication of relative poverty and basic education, and would not be used for the inhabitants of the structured residential areas of the city, or 'working-class' people like the scientific workers themselves.

The number of dependents for a working person has wide-ranging implications for poverty, including limited capital accumulation and even health status.

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