Title: Health Inequalities
1Health Inequalities
2Poverty 1900
- That in this land of abounding wealth, during a
time of perhaps unexampled prosperity, probably
more than one fourth of the population are living
in poverty, is a fact that may well cause great
searchings of heart. There is surely need for a
greater concentration of thought by the nation
upon the well-being of its own people.... - (Rowntree, 1901, p 304 cited in Lloyd, 2006)
3Poverty 2000
- The issue isn't in fact whether the very richest
person ends up becoming richer. The issue is
whether the poorest person is given the chance
that they don't otherwise have ... the justice
for me is concentrated on lifting incomes of
those that don't have a decent income. It's not a
burning ambition of mine to make sure that David
Beckham earns less money. - (Tony Blair, Quoted in Bromley, 2003, p 74)
4Global inequalities
- half of world trade and more than half of
global investment benefit just twenty-two
countries accommodating a mere 14 per cent of the
world's population, whereas the forty-nine
poorest countries inhabited by 11 per cent of the
world's population receive between them only a
0.5 per cent share of the global product - just
about the same as the combined income of the
three wealthiest men of the planet. Ninety per
cent of the total wealth of the planet remains in
the hands of just 1 per cent of the planet's
inhabitants. And there are no breakwaters in
sight capable of stemming the global tide of
income polarization - still ominously rising
(Bauman, 20076)
5Individual vs. Society
Health - individual health (medical
practitioners) bio-genetic causes
Societal Psychology
Community Psychology
- population health (epidemiology) social and
economic causes
6Individual vs. society
- Psychology - bio-medical
- What makes one individual healthier than another?
- Psychology societal / community
- What makes one society healthier than another?
7- A societys life expectancy is closely related to
the scale of income inequality - Life expectancy increases when income
inequalities decrease due to increases in social
cohesion.
8The Epidemiological Transition
- The main cause of death in a society moves from
infectious diseases (eg. cholera) to degenerative
disease (eg. cancer) - Following the transition, growth in the economy
and further improvements in living standard have
little effect on improving health
Inequalities and health
It is not the richest countries that have the
best health, but the most egalitarian.
(Wilkinson, 19963)
9The missing link...
- Health and quality of life in modern societies
is primarily dependent on distributional
justice and level of what might be called social
capital. - (Wilkinson, 19969)
- E.g., Japans dramatic rise in life expectancy
10Some surprising findings!
- .. Numbered among the healthiest countries in
the world are countries with particularly high
rates of smoking (Wilkinson, 199617) - During the two world wars life expectancy for men
and women in Britain increased by six and seven
years - twice as fast as the average rate of
improvement during the rest of the century
(Winter, 1988, cited in Wilkinson, 1996, Ch6).
11Changes in life expectancy in England Wales
12But isnt improvement in health due to medical
advances?
- Bulk of the decline in infectious disease
occurred before medical interventions were
invented (McKeown, et al. 1975) - Iatrogenesis
- One-quarter of all deaths in health care are now
caused by treatments of one sort or the other.
Doctors would find it very hard to function if
forced to face up to all the damage they cause in
their efforts to do good. (Healy, 2004 275) - Conclusion
- Social and economic determinants are
substantially more powerful than medical
(biological) determinants of ill health
13The magnitude of the problem
- In the 1980s death rates were four times as high
in the poorest 10 of electoral wards in the
North East of England as they were in the
wealthiest 10 (Phillimore et al. 1994). - Men in the most prosperous parts of London live
11.5 years longer than men in central Glasgow
(Office of National Statistics, 2005) - Report available free from www.statistics.gov.u
k/statbase/Product.asp?vlnk8841
14Health inequalities are due to
- social mobility (social drift) - NO
- genetics - NO
- differences in medical care - NO
- differences in risk behaviours - NO
15Not just a problem for the poor
- In societies with large income inequalities,
levels of morbidity (illness) and mortality
(death) are higher across all socio-economic
groups, not just amongst the poorest.
16People living on low incomes
17Dramatic increase in UK income inequalities in
the 1980s were followed by
- a dramatic drop in reading standards among
children - a rapid increase in school expulsions
- an unprecedented rise in crime rates
- a 75 increase in suicide rates among young men
- Twice as much drug dealing
- 4 - 5 times increase in drug related deaths
18Socio-economic interventions in health
- The crucial pathways leading to disease are
psychosocial - Modern health problems reflect peoples
subjective experience of their personal
circumstances - Health is affected by our social arrangements
- Social support (individual level)
- Social capital (community level)
19Psychosocial pathways
- Health inequalities result from peoples
perception of their income relative to others.
This produces negative emotions like shame and
distrust which have a negative effect on health
through psychoneuroendocrine mechanisms and/or
health-damaging behaviours (Ellaway, et al.
2001).
20Cross cultural comparisions
Standards of health Life expectancy Education
standards
USA Britain
Sweden Japan
Crime Prison populations Health inequalities
High
Low
True during 1980s
21- We - at least in the developed countries - live
undoubtedly in some of the most secure
societies that ever existed. And yet it is
precisely the cosseted and pampered we' of all
people who feel more threatened, insecure and
frightened, more inclined to panic, and more
passionate about everything related to security
and safety than people of most other societies on
record. - (Bauman, 200755)
22Social capital, Economics Crime
- the most spectacular safety panics' and the
loudest alarms about rising criminality, coupled
with ostentatiously tough actions by governments
and manifested among other ways in a rapidly
rising prison population have occurred since
the middle 1960s in the countries with the least
developed social services (like Spain, Portugal
or Greece), and in the countries where social
provision was being drastically reduced (like the
United States and Great Britain). the new focus
on crime and on dangers threatening the bodily
safety of individuals and their property has been
shown beyond reasonable doubt to be intimately
related to the pace of economic deregulation
and of the related substitution of individual
self-responsibility for social solidarity. - (Bauman, 200716-17)
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25Human beings construct their realities in a
process of interaction with other human beings
(Meltzer et al. 1975)
it is always possible to take apart an
intellectual system and trace its component parts
to the interests of certain social groups
(Parker, 1999)
26Choosing health making healthy choices
easier (White Paper, Nov 2004)
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