Title: Which Tips for Health Really Matter
1- Which Tips for Health Really Matter?
- Don't smoke. If you can, stop. If you can't, cut
down. - Follow a balanced diet with plenty of fruit and
vegetables. - Keep physically active.
- Manage stress by, for example, talking things
through and making time to relax. - If you drink alcohol, do so in moderation.
- Cover up in the sun, and protect children from
sunburn. - Practice safer sex.
- Take up cancer screening opportunities.
- Be safe on the roads follow the Highway Code.
- Learn the First Aid ABC airways, breathing,
circulation. - Foreward to Acheson Report
2- or
- Don't be poor. If you can, stop. If you can't,
try not to be poor for long. - Don't have poor parents.
- Own a car.
- Don't work in a stressful, low paid manual job.
- Don't live in damp, low quality housing.
- Be able to afford to go on a holiday and
sunbathe. - Practice not losing your job and don't become
unemployed. - Take up all benefits you are entitled to, if you
are unemployed, retired or sick or disabled. - Don't live next to a busy major road or near a
polluting factory. - Learn how to fill in the complex housing
benefit/shelter application forms before you
become homeless and destitute. - See Donaldson, L. (1999). Ten Tips For Better
Health. On-line at http//www.official-documents.c
o.uk/document/cm43/4386/4386-tp.htm. - Gordon, D. (1999). An Alternative Ten Tips for
Staying Healthy. Personal Communication, October
10, 1999.
3Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- What are health inequalities?
- What causes them?
- How can we reduce them?
- Can community development approaches reduce
health inequalities? - Do you think your work reduces health
inequalities? - Future work for CDHN.
- Barbary Cook, Director, 2nd March 2007
4Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- Tackling health Inequalities is Really, Really,
Really difficult. - People are still trying to work out whats the
best way to do it. - In community development and health we have to
ask ourselves if were doing it in the most
effective way we can.
5Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- What are health inequalities?
- People with no formal educational qualifications
are half as likely as those with third level
education to have excellent/very good health. - People who are unemployed are a third less likely
than those in employment to have a high general
mental health score. - People with the lowest income are half as likely
as those with the highest income to be very
satisfied with their health or have a very good
quality of life. - People who rent in the public sector are nearly
half as likely as those who own their own home to
have a very good quality of life. - Balanda,K.,Wilde, J. (2003) Inequalities in
Perceived Health A Report on the All-Ireland
Social Capital and Health Survey. Dublin
Institute of Public Health in Ireland.
6Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- What are health inequalities?
- Differences in health status/outcomes between two
groups of people. - Often between the lowest and highest
socio-economic groups. - Can be between genders, between different
ethnicities etc. - When you talk about tackling a health inequality
you have to think about who you are working with
and what other groups health status/outcomes you
are comparing your group to. - Thats the gap youre trying to close.
7Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- Differences in lifestyle behaviour such as
diet,exercise,tobacco use have been presented as
the prime determinants of health. However
according to WHO, 2003 these risk factors only
account for a small proportion of variation in
heart disease and cancers. - The evidence that the social determinants of
health are more important than biomedical and
lifestyle factors is clear. - According to WHO, 2003 despite this evidence
people are told by the government, media and
policy makers that lifestyle factors are both a
threat and a salvation to their health. - Anna Cootes, Kings Fund on WHO, The Solid Facts
(2003)
8Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- How do the wider determinants cause health
inequalities? - Material (poverty, income distribution) or
psycho-social (understand your status relative to
other people) or a combination? - Influences at macro-social (e.g. public policy),
meso-social (e.g. work environment) or individual
level? - A life-course or longitudinal approach (e.g.
critical early life experience or cumulative
effects over time) - Cultural context (differences within and between
countries)? - Determinants of Social Disadvantage, presentation
by Prof. Cecily Kelleher, Health Research Board
Unit for Health Status and Health Gain,
1999-2004, Combat Poverty Agency conference on
the social determinants of health
9Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- Labour Govt targets on health inequalities
- Education welfare to work environment housing
and urban renewal better transport - What has been done?
- Minimum wage and tax credits
- Community based interventions
- 500 Sure start programmes 1.3 billion
- New Deal 1.9 million
- 26 Health Action Zone programmes 449 million
- Healthy living centres 300 million
- Local Strategic Partnerships 2 billion
- Anna Cootes, Kings Fund
10Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- Swedish Health Policy has six main actions.
- Swedish Public health policy - these health goals
are not very sophisticated, however the targets
are formulated in terms of the determinants of
health and there is a consensus on their
importance - Increase social capital, decrease inequality and
discrimination - Improve conditions for children and young people,
better support for families - Promote healthy lifestyles, support the
vulnerable - Provide good public health at all levels
- Promote good working conditions
- Improve the physical environment
- Presentation, Anna Cootes, Kings Fund
11Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- The result
- Sweden has low mortality rates,
- high life expectancy,
- and favourable health indicators across all
groups - Reducing Inequalities in Health a European
Perspective (2002) Burgstrom et al
12Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- Even though there is acceptance of the impact of
wider determinants on health interventions still
mostly revolve around individuals and lifestyles
- Investing for Health etc focusing on smoking
cessation, fitness, nutrition etc. - Why? - Asthana and Halliday say its because
stronger evidence base for these interventions - Favour randomised controlled trials research
funding flows down existing policy priorities
medical epidemiology prefers linear causal
relationships rather than possibly non-linear
interplay of wider determinants political will. - Response need to strengthen the evidence base
for community-development wider determinants
interventions (poverty, education, focus on
lowest socio-economic group, neighbourhood
renewal).
13Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- Rob Phipps, DHSSPS, Presentation to Belfast
Healthy Cities Equity in Health course, i.e. from
statutory point of view - Interventions that target socio-economic
disadvantage - Policies that promote educational achievement of
children from lower socio-economic families - Taxation policies that reduce income inequalities
- Benefit uptake schemes, transfer of extended
benefits to particular groups.
14Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- But what if everything depends on macro-level
interventions?
15Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- What can community development offer health
inequality interventions? - Community-based
- Empowerment people who are experincing the
inequality define the problem and design the
solution - Responsive
- Practical can tackle the real problems people
are experiencing - Can reach most disadvantaged groups
- Can design solutions that are complex and deal
with lots of different issues at the same time
16Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- Rob Phipps, DHSSPS, presentation to Belfast
Healthy Cities Equity in Health course - Correlates or causes
- Partnership empowerment community-based
stakeholder involvement targeted integrated
pragmatic realistic informed (theoretically
sound) - So community development has good process
ingredients - Phipps asked are these variables necessary or
sufficient we would say necessary but not
sufficient
17Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- What do our interventions look like at the
moment? - Turn to the person beside you and briefly
describe one of the projects youre working on. - Try and describe what health inequality it is
tackling and how. - Feedback on flipcharts common ingredients
18Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- What do our interventions look like at the
moment? - Do we intervene to tackle the symptoms or the
causes of health inequalities in our community?
19Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- Community development that moves from the
individual to the system - Interventions based around service provision and
health improvement pathways for individuals - Interventions are responsive, understand the
impact of the wider determinants of health on
that individual (education, poverty etc.),
complex and people clearly benefit - However, even though we build the wider
determinants into the intervention we still
intervene to the individual - What would it look like to intervene against the
wider determinants themselves? - Advocacy that
moves beyond individual pathways to political
problems?
20Community Development Approaches to Tackling
Health Inequalities
- Future work for CDHN.
- Strengthen the evidence base for
community-development wider determinants
interventions - Develop advocacy work on wider determinants
- What else?
- Thanks!