Rural Health Disparities for Men

This blog examines how rural health disparities place men at higher risk for poor physical and mental health outcomes due to limited healthcare access, fewer recreational spaces, high insurance costs, food insecurity, and provider shortages. It highlights that rural men experience higher rates of chronic illness, mental health challenges, suicide, and substance use, with disparities varying by region and shaped by social determinants of health such as socioeconomic status, education, environment, and population decline. The article emphasizes that these challenges are structural—not a lack of concern for health—and that blaming rural communities erodes trust in public health efforts. It argues for community-centered solutions that include respectful engagement, local partnerships, mobile healthcare, education, and youth involvement, concluding that improving rural men’s health requires tailored, collaborative approaches that recognize men in rural areas as essential to the well-being of families, workplaces, and communities.Continue reading

Men’s Social Determinants of Health

This blog explains how men’s health goals and outcomes are deeply shaped by social determinants of health (SDOH)—the non-medical factors that influence where men are born, how they are raised, where they work, and how they age. It outlines the five core SDOH—economic stability, education access and quality, healthcare access and quality, neighborhood and built environment, and social and community context—and shows how each affects men’s ability to seek care, make healthy choices, and maintain well-being. The piece emphasizes that men’s health challenges are not due to personal failure, but to structural barriers such as financial strain, limited healthcare access, demanding work schedules, unsafe or resource-poor neighborhoods, and stigma around help-seeking. By increasing awareness of how these determinants interact, the article argues that men can better understand their health challenges, reduce stigma, and support healthier behaviors, ultimately strengthening families, communities, and long-term outcomes for future generations.Continue reading

Homicide and the Lifespan Gender Gap

Summary: Men’s Health Network highlights how homicide contributes to the Lifespan Gender Gap—the nearly six-year difference in life expectancy between men and women. Each preventable death of a young man shortens the national average and represents lost potential, relationships, and community strength. In his article, Dr. Andrew Smiler examines data showing that men account for 80% of homicide victims, with most deaths occurring among young men under 35. Many are killed by people they know, often in moments of conflict or status-related tension. Smiler suggests that prevention begins with education—teaching boys and men how to resolve conflict, manage emotions, and de-escalate situations without violence. Men’s Health Network calls for greater empathy and early intervention to help young men live longer, healthier lives, reminding readers that every life saved helps close the gap and strengthen families and communities nationwide.Continue reading

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