Health determinants can be divided into two categories: physical determinants and social determinants. These determinants are factors that contribute to a person’s overall state of health, and include biological, socioeconomic, psychological, social, and behavior factors. Typically, the physical determinants are broken down into biology and genetics, such as sex and age, individual behaviors, such as alcohol and drug use or unprotected sex, social environment factors like discrimination or income, physical environment, like where a person lives, the weather, water quality, and built environment, as well as health services and access to health care and insurance. The social determinants of health include social and economic systems responsible for health inequities, like the social environment, health services, and structural or societal factors, often shaped by distribution of money, power, and resources throughout local communities, nations, and the world. In summary, these determinants are a combination of where we live, work, and play, and include transportation, access to markets, banks, quality education, and safe neighborhoods, community integration and social support, culture, language, policy, and racism (Determinants of Health,…