Health & Public Well-Being are often spoken of as shared priorities, yet modern systems frequently treat them as markets, management problems, or public relations concerns rather than human necessities.
The structures meant to keep people healthy can become tangled in profit incentives, bureaucracy, unequal access, political interests, and institutional self-protection.
What emerges is not just a story about medicine or policy, but about who receives care, who is ignored, what is prevented, and what is allowed to become normal.
This section examines how health is shaped not only by doctors and hospitals, but by economics, environment, labor, governance, and the broader priorities of the society people live within.