Week 9 Flashcards
What do we mean by health inequalities
Health inequalities are avoidable, unfair and systematic differences in health between different groups of people. There are many kinds of health inequality and many ways in which the term is used. This means that when we talk about ‘health inequality’ it is useful to be clear on which measure in unequally distributed and between which people. (Kings fund 2020)
Health inequalities
Preventable and unjust differences in health status across the population and between specific population groups
Avoidable differences do not occur randomly or by chance
Socially determined circumstances often beyond control of the individual
Limit opportunities and healthy life expectancy
Health inequality factors that policy often considers
Socio-economic factors, for example, income
Geography for example, region or whether urban or rural
Specific characteristics including those protected in law such as sex, ethnicity or disability
Socially excluded groups for example people experiencing homelessness
(Kings fund 2020)
Intersectionality
People experience different combinations of factors
The way different health inequality factors interact with each other is called intersectionality
Life expectancy at birth
Key measure of health inequality
Linked to peoples socio economic circumstances
Deprivation is a common measure of socio economic circumstances
Index of multiple deprivation
Deprivation and health
Index of multiple deprivation :
-level of income
-employment
-education
-levels of crime
Social gradient in health is the systematic relationship between deprivation and life expectancy
Males living in least deprived areas live 9.4 years longer thank males in most deprived areas
Gap is 7.4 years for females
Healthy life expectancy
Good health is another key measure of health inequality
2 important measures:
-healthy life expectancy
-disability free life expectancy
Inequalities in avoidable mortality
Some deaths are avoidable
Dependent on the getting help with illnesses and disease
Long term health conditions
Major causes of poor quality of life
Is a barrier to amount of type of work
Correlated with lower socio economic groups
Tend to be more severe in those in lower socio economic groups
Deprivation linked to having more than one LTC
Prevalence of mental ill health
Difficulties with accuracy of figure
Being in a protected characteristic linked to mental ill health
Women more likely to experience CMD, 1/5 and 1/8
Young women in particular
Psychotic disorders and ethnicity
People who identify as LGBTQ+ experience higher rates of poor mental ill health and lower well being than those who do not identify
Among working age adults suicide rates among the most deprived were consistently double the rates than those who were the least deprived
Wider determinants of health
These are social, economic and environmental conditions
-income
-access to green space
-access to healthy food
-nature of work
-home you live in
Behavioural risk factors
A persons behaviour is a major determinant of how healthy they are
4 principal behavioural risks to health are:
-smoking, poor diet, physical inactivity and high alcohol consumption
These risk are higher in disadvantaged groups
Circumstances can make it harder to move away from unhealthy behaviours
Access and experience of health services
Refers to services that are timely appropriate and easy to use
Full range access refers to access to preventative interventions, social services as well as primary and secondary care
Inequitable access means a groups faces barriers accessing these services that they need
Interactions between factors
We can see a complex interaction between a
number of factors
-Quality of health and care services
– Individual behaviours
– The places and communities people live in
– Wider determinants like education, housing and access to green space
The inverse care law
Those who need care the most are least likely to get it and those who least need it tend to use health services more
Access and equity
Marmot review fair society, health lives 2010
Health equity in England: the marmot review 10 years on
The health gap has grown between wealthy and deprived areas
The amount of time people spend in poor health has increased across England since 2010
Impact of COVID-19 and health inequalities
Mortality rates higher in more deprived areas
2.6 times higher for the most deprived decile
Ethnic minority groups have experience higher mortality
Highest being bangladeshi, Pakistani and Caribbean groups also mortality rates from all causes were higher in these groups
Covid-19 and disabled people
Greater risk of dying from COVID
Risk of death 1.6 and 1.4 times greater for disabled women and men respectively (those who consider their daily life to be ‘limited a lot’)
Marmot 10 years on
As Marmot notes “if health has stopped improving it is a sign that society has stopped improving” what is government for it not to act on that (Marmot 2020)
Cultural blindness
Claiming not to see differences in race, culture, ethnicity
‘Treating everyone the same way’
-this one size fits all approach
-does not represent personal care
-does not give equal chance