P
Péter Makara
Researcher at Semmelweis University
Publications - 4
Citations - 231
Péter Makara is an academic researcher from Semmelweis University. The author has contributed to research in topics: European union & Population. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications receiving 212 citations.
Papers
More filters
The State of Men's Health in Europe
Alan White,Bruno de Sousa,Richard O. de Visser,Richard Hogston,Svend Aage Madsen,Péter Makara,Noel Richardson,Witold Zatonski +7 more
TL;DR: As comprehensive a picture as possible has been compiled on the state of men’s health across Europe, using routinely collected statistics on morbidity and mortality and data from academic literature to inform policy makers, health professionals, academics and the wider population of the health challenges men face.
Journal ArticleDOI
Men's health in Europe.
Alan White,Bruno de Sousa,Richard O. de Visser,Richard Hogston,Svend Aage Madsen,Péter Makara,Martin McKee,Gary Raine,Noel Richardson,Nicholas Clarke,Witold Zatonski +10 more
TL;DR: The very large variations seen in the health of men across Europe demonstrates that much of men's higher risk of premature death is caused by socio-cultural factors and therefore avoidable.
Journal ArticleDOI
Europe's men need their own health strategy.
Alan White,Martin McKee,Noel Richardson,Richard O. de Visser,Svend Aage Madsen,Bruno de Sousa,Richard Hogston,Witold Zatonski,Péter Makara +8 more
TL;DR: A recent European report on men’s health shows that it lags behind that of women, and Alan White and colleagues analyse the problems and call for more policy, practice, and research aimed specifically at men.
Journal ArticleDOI
An examination of the association between premature mortality and life expectancy among men in Europe
Alan White,Martin McKee,Bruno de Sousa,Richard O. de Visser,Richard Hogston,Svend Aage Madsen,Péter Makara,Noel Richardson,Witold Zatonski,Gary Raine +9 more
TL;DR: Improvements in the life expectancy at birth of men and women have mostly occurred at older ages, suggesting a need for interventions to tackle their high death rate.