UNNATURAL CAUSES is inequality making us sick? HEALTH EQUITY research topics and resources to learn more
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Handouts

Handouts - To pass out at events

Backgrounders - To better understand the issues

Event Planning Tools - To organize your event

Publicity Materials - To publicize your event

Backgrounders

Image Thumbnail 10 Things to Know about Health (pdf) E-mail to a friend
UNNATURAL CAUSES, 2008

A two-page handout that briefly describes ten key messages about health equity, as  presented in the PBS series UNNATURAL CAUSES, useful for spurring discussion and raising awareness.

Image Thumbnail Backgrounders on Health Equity Topics (pdf) E-mail to a friend
UNNATURAL CAUSES

This document by California Newsreel provides an overview of how social concerns such as income, jobs, education, housing, and racism relate to health outcomes and inequities. The short pieces in this document are taken from the topic introductions in the Health Equity database on the UNNATURAL CAUSES Web site.

Image Thumbnail CREATORS MUSE, An interview with the filmmakers (pdf) E-mail to a friend
UNNATURAL CAUSES, 2008

Series Creator/Executive Producer Larry Adelman and Co-Executive Producer Llew Smith offer insights on the art, the science and the inspiration behind UNNATURAL CAUSES: Is Inequality Making Us Sick?

Image Thumbnail Glossary of Social Determinants of Health (SDOH) Terms E-mail to a friend
WEB SITE, Public Health Agency of Canada

A great guide to the lingo of SDOH to help you and the groups you outreach to better understand other materials.

Image Thumbnail Making Health Equity Visible: Results and Recommendations from the Unnatural Causes User Survey E-mail to a friend
UNNATURAL CAUSES, 2009

In December 2008, California Newsreel conducted a web-based survey to better ascertain just how UNNATURAL CAUSES was being used as a tool to educate, organize, and advocate for health equity. Based on the survey findings, feedback from outreach partners, and the observations of our team, we compiled recommendations for using Unnatural Causes more effectively in the development and mobilization of a stronger movement for health equity.

You can also download the PDF of the raw charts for each question.

Image Thumbnail Policy Guide (pdf) E-mail to a friend
UNNATURAL CAUSES

This guide contains a menu of policy ideas that can improve health equity. Generally, such policies aim to: tackle inequality and improving living standards, protect those at the bottom of the pyramid, and reform decision-making processes.

Image Thumbnail Race, Racial Inequality, and Health Inequities: Separating Myth from Fact (pdf) E-mail to a friend
ARTICLE by Brian Smedley, Michael Jeffries, Larry Adelman and Jean Cheng

This paper, prepared by staff at The Opportunity Agenda and California Newsreel, provides background, statistics, and theoretical frameworks to help the reader better understand the role that "race" plays in health inequities. Evidence is presented that discounts popularly accepted genetic explanations and supports theories of socially-based factors.

Image Thumbnail Selected Additional Resources on Health and Place E-mail to a friend
HANDOUT from UNNATURAL CAUSES

This handout describes several key resources that may be useful for audiences interested in learning more about the connections between population health and the built / physical, social, economic, and service environment.

Image Thumbnail Series Background - Summary, Objectives, and Themes (pdf) E-mail to a friend
California Newsreel, 2008

A seven-page document outlining the background, objectives, and key themes of the UNNATURAL CAUSES series.

Image Thumbnail Series Overview: One-Page Flier(pdf) E-mail to a friend
UNNATURAL CAUSES
Image Thumbnail Why Our Greatest Health Concern Isn't Diet or Exercise - It's Neighborhood E-mail to a friend
OP-ED by Larry Adelman on AlterNet.org, February 19, 2009

Series Creator and Executive Producer Larry Adelman expands upon economist Robert Evan's analogy of health care as a repair shop to illustrate the crucial role that "road conditions" play in determining our health status.

Download as PDF.