1 / 27

Health inequalities: underlying factors and different ways of addressing them

Health inequalities: underlying factors and different ways of addressing them. health is unequally distributed in Europe – between and within countries focus here on health inequalities within countries, between socioeconomic groups highlight 5 key points.

shania
Download Presentation

Health inequalities: underlying factors and different ways of addressing them

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Health inequalities: underlying factors and different ways of addressing them

  2. health is unequally distributed in Europe – between and within countries • focus here on health inequalities within countries, between socioeconomic groups • highlight 5 key points

  3. 1. Health inequalities exist in all European countries

  4. Mortality rates (per 1000 person years) of lower & higher educated groups, women aged 60-69 high low Source: unpublished estimates by M. Huisman, A.E. Kunst and J.P. Mackenbach for the EU Working Group on  Socioeconomic Inequalities in Health

  5. Mortality rates (per 1000 person years) of lower & higher educated groups, men aged 60-69 high low Source: unpublished estimates by M. Huisman, A.E. Kunst and J.P. Mackenbach for the EU Working Group on  Socioeconomic Inequalities in Health

  6. 2. Health inequalities take the form of a social gradient

  7. Sweden: rates of limiting longstanding illness by educational level, 1994-5 Source: Lungberg et al, 2001

  8. England: rates of limiting longstanding illness bysocioeconomic group (based on occupation), 1998 Source: General Household Survey, 1998

  9. 3. Health inequalities reflect inequalities in the distribution of health determinants

  10. Health strategy of the European community 2001-06 • ‘addressing health determinants, the underlying factors which affect people’s health’ • ‘life-style related health determinants’ : cigarette smoking, diet etc • ‘socio-economic determinants’: life chances (childhood circumstances, education, employment), working & living conditions, health & welfare services

  11. What is important about these determinants for health inequalities is their social distribution • health determinants display a socioeconomic gradient

  12. Risk factors by social class at birth, 1958 birth cohort Source: Power 1997

  13. 4. Multiple understandings of what it means to tackle health inequalities • improving the health of disadvantaged groups • reducing health differences between socioeconomic groups

  14. improving the health of disadvantaged groups • focus on marginal & minority groups (immigrant communities, homeless people) • sets boundaries around ‘the problem’

  15. improving the health of disadvantaged groups • absolute improvements in their health may not narrow the gap between them & the wider population (because overall health is improving at a faster rate) • obscures health inequalities across the population

  16. Deaths among men aged 20-64, England and Wales, 1991-3 social classproportion death rates of pop (%)(per 100000) I 7 282 II 27 302 IIInm 9 432 IIIm 31 496 IV 14 500 V 5 816 54 Source: Drever and Whitehead, 1997

  17. reducing health differences between socioeconomic groups • encompasses goals of improving poor & poorer health of most disadvantaged • tackling health inequalities is a population-wide strategy • policies which equalise the distribution of health determinants • too ambitious - or in line with welfare policy?

  18. Effect of major fiscal reforms on disposable household income, 1997 to 2002 Source: IFS, 2001

  19. 5. Tackling health inequalities requires multi-sectoral commitment • health inequalities reflect the unequal distribution of health determinants • broader social and policy changes are often widening inequalities in key determinants • new interventions & existing policies will have an impact on the distribution of health determinants

  20. Getting and keeping health inequalities on the policy agenda is a key challenge for an enlarged Europe

  21. Proportion of households with pre-transfer incomes below 50% of average income, circa 1990 % poor Source: Bradshaw & Chen, 1997

  22. Proportion of households with post-transfer incomes below 50% of average income, circa 1990 % poor Source: Bradshaw & Chen, 1997

  23. Percentage of lone parent households with pre-transfer incomes below 50% of average income, circa 1990 % poor Source: Bradshaw & Chen, 1997

  24. Percentage of lone parent households with post-transfer incomes below 50% of average income, circa 1990 % poor Source: Bradshaw & Chen, 1997

  25. Benefits in kind for non-retired households by income quintile groups, UK, 1998-99 benefits in kind1 as % of post-tax income bottom 2nd 3rd 4th top all households income quintile 1education, NHS, housing, travel subsidies, school meals and welfare milk Source: Harris, 2000

  26. Cigarette smoking among women aged 16 and over by socioeconomic group 1958-2000, Britain Sources: Wald and Nicolaides-Bouman, 1993; Bridgewood et al, 2000

More Related