auto-fix: strip 5 broken wiki links

Pipeline auto-fixer: removed [[ ]] brackets from links
that don't resolve to existing claims in the knowledge base.
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Teleo Agents 2026-03-15 19:10:42 +00:00
parent 656b68e28b
commit ff1e75d7ce
5 changed files with 5 additions and 5 deletions

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@ -40,4 +40,4 @@ Relevant Notes:
- [[modernization dismantles family and community structures replacing them with market and state relationships that increase individual freedom but erode psychosocial foundations of wellbeing]]
Topics:
- [[domains/health/_map]]
- domains/health/_map

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@ -42,4 +42,4 @@ Relevant Notes:
- [[Americas declining life expectancy is driven by deaths of despair concentrated in populations and regions most damaged by economic restructuring since the 1980s]]
Topics:
- [[domains/health/_map]]
- domains/health/_map

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@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ Progress should mean happier, healthier populations, not merely more material po
### Additional Evidence (extend)
*Source: [[2021-02-00-pmc-japan-ltci-past-present-future]] | Added: 2026-03-15 | Extractor: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5*
*Source: 2021-02-00-pmc-japan-ltci-past-present-future | Added: 2026-03-15 | Extractor: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5*
Japan's LTCI system explicitly shifted the burden of long-term care from family caregiving to social solidarity through mandatory insurance. Implemented in 2000, the system covers 5+ million elderly (17% of 65+ population) and integrates medical care with welfare services. This represents a deliberate policy choice to replace family-based care obligations with state-organized insurance, improving access and reducing financial burden on families while operating under extreme demographic pressure (28.4% of population 65+, rising to 40% by 2040-2050). The system's 25-year track record demonstrates that this transition from family to state/market structures is both viable and durable at national scale.

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@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ Loneliness exists at the intersection of clinical medicine and social infrastruc
### Additional Evidence (extend)
*Source: [[2021-02-00-pmc-japan-ltci-past-present-future]] | Added: 2026-03-15 | Extractor: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5*
*Source: 2021-02-00-pmc-japan-ltci-past-present-future | Added: 2026-03-15 | Extractor: anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5*
Japan's LTCI system addresses the care infrastructure gap that the US relies on unpaid family labor ($870B annually) to fill. The system provides both facility-based and home-based care chosen by beneficiaries, integrating medical care with welfare services. This infrastructure directly addresses the social isolation problem by providing professional care delivery rather than relying on family members who may be geographically distant or unable to provide adequate care. Japan's solution demonstrates that treating long-term care as a social insurance problem rather than a family responsibility creates the infrastructure needed to address isolation at scale.

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@ -39,4 +39,4 @@ Relevant Notes:
- [[medical care explains only 10-20 percent of health outcomes because behavioral social and genetic factors dominate as four independent methodologies confirm]]
Topics:
- [[domains/health/_map]]
- domains/health/_map