Title: Social class and health inequalities
1Social class and health inequalities
- Sarah Earthy
- Sociology of Contemporary Societies
2Social patterning of health and illness
- Social and economic factors behind apparently
random patterns. - Gender, age and ethnicity as social categories.
- Proxy measures to represent complex social
concepts.
3Definition of health
- Health is a state of complete physical, mental,
and social well-being and not merely the absence
of disease or infirmity. - World Health Organisation
4- Data on standardised mortality rates for men
aged 15-64 in England and Wales, 1931-1991 from
Bartley (2004)
5- Graph illustrating the widening mortality gap
between the social classes from Dept of Health
(2003) Tackling Health Inequalities A Programme
for Action
6Recent evidence on trends(Dept of Health Aug
2005)
- Widening gap in life expectancy
- Gap between the fifth of LAs with the lowest life
expectancy and the national average increased by
almost 2 for males and 5 for females between
1997-99 and 2001-03. - Â
- Widening gap in infant mortality
- In 1997-99, the infant mortality rate among the
routine and manual occupational group was 13
higher than for the total population. In 2001-03,
it was 19 higher. - Â
- Gap narrowing for heart disease cancers.
7Methodological issues
- Measuring rates of death and illness, not health.
- Role of human judgement.
- Reliance on occupational class as an indicator of
social position and socio-economic circumstances. - Time lag between childhood experiences of
deprivation and effects on health in later life. - Time lag between changes in health behaviour and
health gain at a population level. - Absolute versus relative.
- Political sensitivity language measures
research funding explanations.
8Stages in developing an illness
- Vulnerability genetic / environmental
- Health-risking behaviours
- Early symptoms / illness behaviour
- Speed of diagnosis
- Efficacy of treatment
- Compliance with treatment
- Underlying resilience / vulnerability
- Response to recurrence patient / health care
system.
9Policy interest
- 1942 - Beveridge Report
- 1980 - The Black Report
- 1987 - The Health Divide (Margaret Whitehead and
the Health Education Council) - 1990s - Department of Health enquiry into
variations in health - 1998 - Independent Inquiry into Inequalities in
Health (The Acheson Report) - 2002 Cross Cutting Review of interventions
(Treasury-led) - 2003 Dept of Health Tackling Health
Inequalities A Programme for Action - 2005 Dept of Health Status Report on the
Programme for Action. - http//dh.gov.uk
- Â
10Report of the Working Group on Inequalities in
Health (The Black Report)
- 1977Â - Set up by Secretary of State for Social
Services - David Ennals (Labour). - Â
- Aims
- Review evidence about differences in health
status amongst social classes. - Identify possible causes.
- Draw implications for policy and future research.
- 1980Â - Reported back to Patrick Jenkin
(Conservative). Refused to endorse findings -
cost of recommended action inadequacy of
explanatory framework.
11Key findings - Black Report
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Inequalities in health represented 74,000
lives lost during 1970-72. - Â Â Â Â Â Â Reduced mortality since 1950s in
occupational groups I II not matched in groups
IV V. - Â Â Â Â Â Â Group V had 2.5 times greater chance of
dying before retirement age than group I. - Â Â Â Â Â Â SMRs were higher for groups IV and V in
68 out of 92 causes of death for men of working
age. - Â Â Â Â Â Â Perinatal mortality rate in unskilled
families was double that in professional families
and widened in first year of childs life. - -Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
12Types of explanation
- Artefact - how health and social class are
measured. - Social selection -Â direct or indirect.
- Cultural/behavioural - cultural norms of
particular sub-groups contribute to health
harming-behaviours. - Materialist/structural - social class /income/
status ? health differences.
13By the 1990s...
- Better measures of socio-economic position showed
greater inequalities in mortality. - Social class differences in mortality widening.
- Social patterning of health and illness in UK
supported by non-UK data. - Social selection and measurement artefacts
discounted as explanations (longitudinal
studies). - Evidence for ways in which social class affects
health during life as well as length of life. - Â
14By the 1990s (continued)...
- More sophisticated understanding of
socio-economic inequality. - New models of explanation
- genetic
- life course approaches
- psycho-social
- Neo-political/Neo-Marxist analyses.
- Policy readiness to extend action beyond health
and health services.
15Psycho-social explanations
- Stressful conditions at home/work or low social
status. - Whitehall II study (Marmot et al 1991) control,
autonomy, monotony, support from peers,
relationship with superiors. - Relationship between level of income inequality
in a society and health inequalities (Wilkinson
1996, Kawachi et al 1997). - Buffer effects of community ties, social cohesion
and social capital e.g. Roseto.
16Mechanistic links between psycho-social factors
health
- Deprivation ? physical weakness ? illness.
- Deprivation ? stress ? reduced immunity ?
illness. - Deprivation ? stress ? risky health behaviours ?
illness. - Relative deprivation ? depleted social cohesion ?
more crime ? stress ? illness. - Less education ? risky health behaviours ?
illness. - Less education/ deprivation ? fatalism ? risky
health behaviours ? illness. - Depleted social support ? absence of buffers
against stress ? risky health behaviours ?
illness.
17Neo-political explanations
- Political and cultural aspects of health
inequalities. - Focus on structural factors at the societal level
e.g. the difference between societies social
policies and institutions (e.g. Davey-Smith 1996
Lynch 2000). - Relationship between the income distribution
within a society and its policies on welfare,
education, housing, health, social exclusion etc. - More egalitarian countries provide buffers to
protect the individual from the accumulated
effects of material disadvantage and life events.
18Neo-Marxist / Critical Realist perspectives
- Effects of industrial accidents, industrial
diseases, pollution. - Increase in degenerative diseases due to
maladaption to industrial environment. - Relational stressors in workplaces.
- Big business versus health promotion - export of
health hazards and cures. - Health inequalities as the unintended
consequences of the actions of capitalist elites
(Scambler).
19Causal factors
- Direct factors
- Genetic vulnerability.
- Occupational exposures.
- Quality of environment.
- Access to health care.
- Health-related behaviours.
- Long range socio-economic factors.
- Indirect factors
- Relative deprivation.
- Life events.
- Chronic stress.
- Social networks / social support / social
capital. - Political structures and systems