Title: SOCIAL
1SOCIAL COMMUNITY PERSPECTIVES
- Inequalities in Health and Health Care (2)
- 4th February 2003
2Objectives
- To reflect on evidence of inequalities in health
from last week - To reflect on different explanations for
inequalities in health
3Black Report Explanations
- Artefactual
- Social Selection
- Behavioural/Cultural
- Materialist
4Artefactual
- Health and class are artificial variables
- Registrar Generals classification is flawed and
may be circular - Numerator/denominator bias
- Lowest social class groups shrinking ? widens
apparent inequalities
5Social Selection
- Health determines social class through a process
of Health-related social mobility - Healthy move up social hierarchy and unhealthy
move down (Downward drift). - Some evidences that serious illness in childhood
can affect occupational class, e.g people with
mental health problems tend to drift down social
ladder. - However not explain all class gradient. e.g.
children/women, different diseases.
6Behavioural/ Cultural
- Social class determines health through social
class differences in health damaging/promoting
behaviour - These are at least in principle are subject to
individual choice - Smoking, diet, exercise, alcohol consumption,
infant feeding practices all vary by class. - BEWARE OF VICTIM BLAMING Need to be aware of
social/economic context in which these behaviours
occur.
7Smoking
- From 1974 to 1994 smoking in professional groups
decreased by ½., however, by only a 1/3 in
unskilled manual groups. - By 1994 smokers in a minority in all social
classes, however, unskilled manual workers were
2-3 times more likely to smoke than those in
professional groups - Explanations
- 1
- Self-medication - managing stress?
- Gives people some space?
- 2
- Culture of smoking?
- Less motivated to give up?
8Diet
- Availability at small local shops
- Problems with transport.
- Difficult to have a good diet on a low income.
- Cheaper food often over-refined and processed.
9Not all behaviour.
- Risk factors such as smoking, drinking and diet
only explain 1/3 of class gradient. - Diet and smoking behaviour in S Asian population
is better than white population but excessive CHD
in this former group.
10Materialist
- Social class determines health through social
class differences in the material circumstances
of life. - Material aspects of living conditions affect
health. - Asset based measures strongly associated with
mortality rates. - Type of employment and level of employment
influence health. - Differences in working conditions, unemployment,
housing, and diet, is the main cause of illness
and disease not genetics and lifestyle. - Poverty is never officially recorded as a cause
of death, but clearly one of the most important
determinants of our health status.
11Most Plausible Explanation?
- BR emphasises materialistic
- Need to see how material circumstances influence
behaviour and affect life generally
12Another Explanation
- Variations in health can be explained by
variation in quality of and access to health
services. - Poorer people consult GPs more often BUT
relatively less compared with need - Massive under-utilisation of preventative
services by people in lower socio-economic
groups. - More deprived often get less provision in
relation to their need. - Average costs of prescriptions is higher in
affluent areas.
13Tudor-Hart (1971) Inverse Care Law
- the availability of good medical care tends
to vary inversely with the population served. -
- Access
- Quality
- Uptake.
14Access
- Poorer areas have services, which are more
difficult to reach compared with affluent areas.
15Quality
- More poorly resourced practices in inner city
areas. - Under-provision of GPs compared to average in
more deprived areas
16Under Uptake
- Under utilisation of preventative services
antenatal, dentistry, immunisation, cervical
smears. - Paradox lower social classes have worst health
but use services less why?
17Explanations for inequalities between men and
women
- Consider differentials in
- Health behaviour
- Consultation patterns
18Narrowing gap may be explained by
- Improved social circumstances improve womens
healthsame for men? - Stricter laws on drinking and driving, compulsory
seat-belts - Changes in patterns of work
- Decline in male employment sectors traditionally
associated with fatal injuries - Work in female dominated service sector may be
just as unhealthy ? chronic not terminal
19Smoking
- 1948 approx 65 of men smoke - approx 40 women
now nearly equal proportions of women and men
smoke. - US 1980s substantial increase of female mortality
from lung cancer and COAD - UK - male deaths from lung cancer ? female deaths
?
20Womens cigarette smoking by social class
21Womens cigarette smoking by age
22Smoking patterns among Black and minority ethnic
groups in England
23Data from British Household Panel Survey (Graham
and Der, 1999)
- Women on means-tested benefits 33 more likely to
smoke than those not on benefits - Women in rented accommodation are twice as likely
to smoke than women in owner-occupied
accommodation - For women, not having a car in household
increased risk of smoking by 66
24Smoking and caring
- Women with children are more likely to be smokers
and heavier smokers than those without children - Those with heavy caring burdens tend to be
heavier smokers - Womens smoking is tightly woven in with coping
strategies - Smoking plays a contradictory role in womens
lives is health promoting and health damaging
(Graham, 93)
25Consulting patterns
- Higher proportion of women as consumers of health
care. - On average women visit their GP 6xs/year and men
4xs/year. - Working women consult slightly less than
housewives Easier to visit doctor ? - Housewives are less likely to define themselves
as being in excellent health. - under
reporting
26Provision of services
- Health service generally focused on biological
difference - Womens reproductive role ? specialist services
focusing on reproduction - Well woman clinic developed around distinct
biology (screening) - Less specialist health care focused on men
fewer well man clinics and screening for
prostate and testicular cancer
27Are women sicker?
- Hospital admission, GP contact and community
surveys tend to reveal higher rates of
psychosocial ill health among women. - GP data - women suffer more from mental
disorders, osteoarthritis, migraine, obesity and
iron deficiency anaemia (men consult more for
heart attack and angina)
28Need to be careful when looking at data
- 1994 exactly same number of men and women
reporting long-standing illness, - Female excess only found consistently across the
lifecourse in psychological manifestations of
distress, less apparent or reversed, for number
of physical symptoms
29Explanations for different patterns of
consultation
- Higher rates of milder physical problems women
greater likelihood to seek help? - Doctors more likely to define women as ill?
- Differences in mild illnesses artefact of
gender-related health attitudes and behaviours? - Male stoicism, it might be suggested, is
complemented by the cultural acceptance of
vulnerability and sensitivity to symptoms (linked
to the caring role) within women (Annandale,
1998) - Difficult to ascertain whether women over-report
and men under-report ill health who can act as
objective arbiter of experience? - Research suggests women not over-reporting illness
30Macintyre (1993)
- 1700 males and female - MRC Common Cold Unit
rated presence/absence/ severity of cold. - Both men and women likely to over-rate severity
compared to clinical observer. - Men 1.6 times more likely to over-rate symptoms
and to complain at any level - Doctors more likely to observe and diagnose
symptoms in women - Concluded at a given level of clinical signs men
and women equally likely to report related
symptoms- men more likely to report severe
symptoms
31Explanations for inequalities in ethnicity and
health
- Artefactual lots of problems with data
- Language
- Significant number of South Asian (particularly
Bangladeshi women) and Chinese find it more
difficult to communicate with GP. - However.. problem with communication in
consultations generally, but by making it
language makes it an ethnic problem (Sheldon
Parker,1992).
32Geographic location
- Unhealthy areas
- Benefits of being concentrated in large numbers ?
33Cultural difference in expression of
symptoms/accessing care ?
- Many women from minority ethnic groups prefer to
see female GP (preferably same ethnic
background). - Ethnocentric western diagnostic approach may be
inappropriate for some groups (especially with
regard to mental illness).
34Migration effects?
- More healthy more likely to migrate?
- Environmental conditions in country of birth, or
mothers country of birth - Stress
- Little difference between migrants and those born
in UK. - Scotland migrants from Punjab health
deteriorated with time spent in UK
(Williams,1993)
35Cultural difference in health related behaviour
-
- Health behaviour e.g. smoking
- Diet and exercise patterns
- Culture changes over time and according to gender
and class.
36Genetics
- Haemoglobinopathies related to genetic factors
vary across but not exclusive to particular
ethnic groups. - Research continuing re diabetes, coronary heart
disease and hypertension
37The problem of emphasising Cultural difference
- In this perspective, racialized inequalities in
both health and access to health care are
explained as resulting from cultural differences
and deficits. Integration on the part of minority
communities, and cultural understanding and
ethnic sensitivity on the part of the health
professional, then become the obvious solution
personal and institutional racist and racial
discrimination have no part to play in this
equation - Ahmad W.I.U. (eds) (1993)
- Race and health in contemporary Britain
38The problem of emphasising Cultural difference
- Class and consumption only partly explain
inequalities need to look at other social
disadvantage i.e. racism - Tendency to explain inequalities by focusing on
cultural differences and deficits (Ahmad, 1993). - Results in unmet need e.g. elderly South Asian
patients - Tend to ignore healthy cultural practices e.g.
lower alcohol consumption and smoking in Asian
women
39Sheldon and Parker (1992)
- Often race used to explain problems e.g.
Glasgow early C20th - Research focused on nutritional deficiency
diseases, tuberculosis, haemoglobinopathies. - Risk of blaming the individual and culture which
is alien and/or deviant. - Focus on ethnicity may mask other wider
differences related to socio-economic status.
40- When we make links between race and health
status it is notsomething that is inherent to
black people which shapes their health
trajectory, but something inherent to the social
context within which they must live their lives.
(Nettleton,1995,189)
41Impact of racism
- 1/8 minority ethnic people experienced some form
of racial harassment in last year. - ¼ fearful of racial harassment.
- White minority groups e.g. Irish also face
extensive racial harassment. - White respondents admitted racial prejudice (26
against Asians, 20 Caribbean, 8 Chinese) - Institutional and societal racism minority
ethnic groups over-represented in disadvantaged
sectors of society. - Psychological effects of racism makes people ill
- Ethnocentrism in health services
- Experience racism when receiving health care
42Benzeval et al (1995) argue we need to be aware
of
- How socio-economic circumstances, ethnicity and
racial harassment and/or discrimination interact - Impact of material and social circumstances on
health - Impact of racial harassment
43Conclusion
- Illness does not strike purely at random.
- Strong correlation between health and social
class makes assumptions to the contrary difficult
to sustain. - Combination of explanations
44Way forward social class?
- Encourage changes in personal behaviour.
- Improve working conditions.
- Elimination of poverty.
45Way forward Gender
- Gender sensitivity and awareness in policy and
practice need to be aware of how gender, age,
ethnicity, class impact on each other - Ensure equality of healthcare provision for men
and women - Reduce the high mortality rate for young men
- Improve material circumstances of lone mothers
- Policies to minimise the impact of impairment in
older women - More research on inequalities in womens health
and in older people
46Way forward ethnicity
- Policies to eliminate poverty and unemployment
- Improving housing stock
- Urban regeneration
- Policies which take into account variety of
households - Anti-discrimination policies
- Support primary care
- Address language and advocacy needs.
- Cultural competency should be core part of health
workers training. - Supporting doctors from minority ethnic groups
47So what can be done?
- Improving accessibility of health care provision.
- Encouraging groups with the greatest need to make
use of services. - Improve living and working conditions.
- EBP
- Evaluate services
- Needs assessments
- Multi-agency working
- Community participation
- Involvement in decision making