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Which Tips for Health Really Matter? Don't smoke. If you can, stop. If you can't, cut down.

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.

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Which Tips for Health Really Matter? Don't smoke. If you can, stop. If you can't, cut down.

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  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.co.uk/document/cm43/4386/4386-tp.htm. • Gordon, D. (1999). An Alternative Ten Tips for Staying Healthy. Personal Communication, October 10, 1999.

  3. Community 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

  4. Community Development Approaches to Tackling Health Inequalities • Tackling health Inequalities is Really, Really, Really difficult. • People are still trying to work out what’s the best way to do it. • In community development and health we have to ask ourselves if we’re doing it in the most effective way we can.

  5. Community 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.

  6. Community 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 group’s health status/outcomes you are comparing your group to. • That’s the gap you’re trying to close.

  7. Community 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)

  8. Community 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

  9. Community 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

  10. Community 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

  11. Community 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

  12. Community 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 it’s 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).

  13. Community 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.

  14. Community Development Approaches to Tackling Health Inequalities • But what if everything depends on macro-level interventions?

  15. Community 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

  16. Community 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

  17. Community 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 you’re working on. • Try and describe what health inequality it is tackling and how. • Feedback on flipcharts – common ingredients

  18. Community 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?

  19. Community 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?

  20. Community 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!

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