PATTERNS OF HEALTH AND HEALTH INEQUALITIES
Dec 17, 2015
PATTERNS OF HEALTH AND
HEALTH INEQUALITIES
LEARNING OUTCOMES • Long-term trends in population health in the UK
• Comparison to other countries
• Distribution of health and illness within population: social patterning of health and illness
• Evidence for health inequality
DEFINITIONS • Disability free life expectancy
= no. of years an individual can expect to live without a limiting chronic illness or disability
• Gap between life expectancy and disability free life expectancy
= years lived with a limiting chronic illness/disability
• Men and women are living more of their lives disability free
• Women live longer but more years with a limiting chronic illness/disability than men
LONG TERM TRENDS • Public health advances such as better sanitation and clean water, together with changes in social and built environment are associated with changes in pattern of disease.
• ‘Epidemiological transition’
• Disease of ‘affluence’ such as CHD, strokes and obesity become associated with those in lower SES as a country becomes more developed.
• Acute infections and deficiency related diseases have declined but chronic and non-communicable diseases have increased.
• Disease patterns changing – Cancer most common cause of mortality (then resp then circulatory).
INFANT MORTALITY RATE• Decreases during the epidemiological transition.
• Good proxy marker for population health
• Correlates very well with other proxy measures (e.g. disability adjusted life expectancy) but simpler to measure
• Highly sensitive to social determinants of health and disease epidemics thus a good measure of what is happening ‘here and now’
UK COMPARISON TO OTHER COUNTRIES • 20 years ago had similar infant mortality rates to other European countries.
• Now is one of the highest.
DISTRIBUTION OF HEALTH • Social epidemiology – studies the social distribution and social determinants of health based on things like SES, gender and ethnicity.
• Problem with this?
• Not all individuals within a set group will experience the same environment/outcomes.
• What is health inequality?
• Systematic differences in health and illness across social groups.
AGE/GENDER/ETHNICITY/GEOGRAPHY INEQUALTITIES IN HEALTH• Inequality across all age groups but most marked in childhood.
• Socio-economic gradients in mortality less steep for women than for men but women live for more years with a disability.
• People from Black/Minority ethnic groups living in UK are more likely to be diagnosed with mental health problems and report poorer self assessed health. These become more pronounced with age.
• Northern/Western areas have higher early death rates.
HEALTH AND ECONOMIC POSITION How do you measure socio-economic status?
Occupation + income + assets, education and index of multiple deprivation.
Link between CHD/lung cancer and SES?
1. Those at bottom most affected.
2. Gap widening.
Exceptions?
•Breast cancer/melanoma highest in higher SES.
•Prostate cancer most likely in high SES.
Why?
•Better screening/education/enjoy more sunshine/
Live longer?!
Socio-economic groups
EXPLAINING SOCIAL GRADIENT OF HEALTH AND INEQUALITIES• Behavioural/cultural
• Materialist: neo-material and lifecourse
• Psychosocial
BEHAVIOURAL MODEL OF HEALTH INEQUALITIES• Result of individual lifestyle choices – smoking, diet, lack of exercise• i.e. focus on indiviudal behaviours/choice (social variations)
• Lower socio-economic groups - Smoking more prevalent
• Lower social class = increased likelihood of risky behaviours (ill-informed or don’t have discipline to stop)
• 50% of health inequalities are due to health-related behaviours…so not the whole story
MATERIALIST MODEL OF HEALTH INEQUALITIES• Result of material circumstances due to income
• Largely outside the persons’ control – housing, nutrition, work environment etc• Housing – damp can cause asthma or COPD in future• Food – healthier diet is more expensive (food deserts – where shops shut down and choice is removed in communities)
• Further divided into:•Neo-materialistic•Life-approach
NEO-MATERIALIST MODEL OF HEALTH INEQUALITIES• The effect of material circumstances on health reflects a lack of resources at individual and community level
• Related to public underinvestment in the physical, health and social infrastructure
• Think of community not just the individual
LIFE COURSE APPROACH TO HEALTH INEQUALITIES• Parental health disadvantage transmitted in utero and early life stages influence later health outcomes•Poor childhood circumstances brings later disadvantage - set people on pathways that make it more likely they will be exposed to future disadvantages. Some health problems take years to develop, i.e. explains the gradients
•Exposure to one form of material deprivation increases the risk of exposure to others•Advantage/disadvantage tends to ‘cluster’ across the life-course •Poor housing so therefore also more likely to have poor access to food. Problems ‘cluster’
PSYCHOSOCIAL MODEL OF HEALTH INEQUALITIES• Result of stressful conditions or low self-esteem
• Stress affects health:• Indirectly – unhealthy behaviours - smoking, drinking etc harmful coping mechanisms• Directly – increased susceptibility to mental and physical illness via mind-body pathways e.g. feeling run down and stressed results in a cold
• Psychological stress affecting health more likely to be chronic then acute
• Perception of our social position is very important to our health
• Low self-esteem produces negative emotions (anger and anxiety internally) and anti-social behaviour (less socialising and isolation externally)
SOCIAL CAPITAL
Social networks and norms that facilitate co-ordination and co-operation
2 types:Bonding – strong ties between individuals of a social network that see themselves as homogenous
Bridging – links across social groups in society who do not necessarily share similar social identities
QUIZ TIME!!!
HEALTH INEQUALITIES: DEFINITION PLEASE Systematic differences in health and illness across social groups
NAME SOME FACTORS THAT MAY AFFECT HEALTH INEQUALITIES?(5)
Socio-economic group
Age
Ethnicity
Gender
Geography
1.Shift from acute to chronic disease.
2.Reduction in infant mortality rate.
3.Shift from communicable disease (infectious) to non infectious chronic disease.
4.Shift from diseases of affluence (CVD, Stroke etc) being a disease of the poor.
5.Life expectancy increases and deaths from acute infections/deficiency decreases.
WHY IS LUNG CANCER MORE COMMON IN MEN? (2)• More likely to smoke
• Occupational exposure
GIVE SOME EXPLANATIONS AS TO WHY MEN TEND TO NOT LIVE AS LONG AS WOMEN Exposure to occupational accidents and deaths
Less likely to have a support network and bottle problems
Perceive themselves as less vulnerable to illness
Less likely to accept emotional pain as valid
More likely to normalise symptoms (just part of getting old)
More likely to smoke and binge drink
Twice as likely to have an alcohol problem
Strong alcohol/depression/suicide link in men
More likely to be overweight
Young men most at risk of accidental death due to risky behaviour culturally perceived as ‘masculine’ – fast driving, heavy drinking
4 times more likely to commit suicide
Women more likely to consult GP
Well-person checks less well attended by men
Men tend to leave symptoms longer before seeking help