Sweden spends hundreds of billions on healthcare, but almost nothing on keeping people healthy
Sweden spends SEK 700 billion a year on healthcare, but only 3% of resources go to prevention. At the same time, the...
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Org. number: 559342-4947Sweden spends SEK 700 billion a year on healthcare, but only 3% of resources go to prevention. At the same time, the...
Sweden spends SEK 700 billion a year on healthcare, but only 3% of resources go to prevention. At the same time, the...
Sweden spends SEK 700 billion a year on healthcare, but only 3% of resources go to prevention. At the same time, the...
Sweden spends SEK 700 billion a year on healthcare, but only 3% of resources go to prevention. At the same time, the...
Sweden spends SEK 700 billion a year on healthcare, but only 3% of resources go to prevention. At the same time, the...
Journalist and author Johan Wicklén is back on the podcast to talk about his latest book You Green New World. We go through what different types of legalization and decriminalization have looked like in different countries and what path forward is possible for...
Liberal alcohol policy can benefit public health, says Joar Forsell, Member of Parliament for the Liberals. In this week's episode, he presents the party's new alcohol policy program.
An over-reliance on AI risks allowing our medical records to be used by foreign powers, warns Benjamin Kalischer Wellander, a specialist in internal medicine.
Has Sweden's drug policy done more harm than good? In this week's election podcast, Nils Seye Larsen (MP), a member of parliament who wants to see less private care and an investigation into drug policy, is a guest.
More and more people feel that life is meaningless, especially young people. In this week's episode, David Thurfjell, Professor of Religious Studies at Södertörn University and author of the book Anspråkstagen, is our guest. He explains why so many people have lost their sense of meaning, and what we...
There will always be a demand for nicotine, says Karl Erik Lund, a researcher at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health. When the WHO warns of a negative trend among young people in its latest report, Lund believes that the organization is drawing the wrong conclusions.