Top Banner
PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS
46
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

P R E S E N T E R T O O L – R E V I S E D FA L L 2 0 1 3

INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS

Page 2: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

OUTLINE

• Objectives• Ted Talk• Definitions of income and social status• Income and social status as a social determinant

of health• Global and local impact of income and social

status• Poverty and primary care• Activities/Discussion

Page 3: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

OBJECTIVES

• Be able to define income and social status

• Be able to name the millennium development goal that relates to income and social status

• Be able to provide 3 pieces of evidence that income and social status affect health

• Be able to explain to colleagues why an understanding of income and social status is necessary to provide good primary care to patients

Page 4: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

TED TALK

Richard Wilkinson – How economic inequality harms societies (16:55)

• We feel instinctively that societies with huge income gaps are somehow going wrong. Richard Wilkinson charts the hard data on economic inequality, and shows what gets worse when rich and poor are too far apart: real effects on health, lifespan, even such basic values as trust.

• In "The Spirit Level," Richard Wilkinson charts data that proves societies that are more equal are healthier, happier societies

Page 5: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

IN THIS TED TALK FOCUS ON:

• What health and social problems are affected by income?

(life expectancy, infant mortality, math and literacy, homicides, imprisonment, teenage births, trust, obesity, mental illness, social

mobility, social capital/involvement in community life)

• How to countries try to ensure better equality?

(difference in earnings narrowed through taxation vs.. more equal earnings across the board)

• What social groups benefit from better equality in society?

(benefits extend across all social classes)

Page 6: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

GROUP REVIEW AFTER TED TALK….

• What health and social problems are affected by income?

(life expectancy, infant mortality, math and literacy, homicides, imprisonment, teenage births, trust, obesity, mental illness, social

mobility, social capital/involvement in community life)

• How to countries try to ensure better equality?

(difference in earnings narrowed through taxation vs.. more equal earnings across the board)

• What social groups benefit from better equality in society?

(benefits extend across all social classes)

Page 7: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

DISCUSSION

• How can we define income?

• What is social status?

Page 8: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

DEFINITIONS

• Income: Financial or material resources

Page 9: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

DEFINITIONS

• Social status: The social and economic positions of individuals or groups within society

Page 10: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS AS A SDOH

• Income provides the prerequisites for health...

Shelter Food Warmth

Page 11: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

SOCIO-ECONOMIC CONDITION AS A SDOH

Page 12: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

SOCIO-ECONOMIC CONDITION AS A SDOH

Income provides the prerequisites for health…

Shelter Food Warmth

Low income and poverty can…

• Cause stress & anxiety• Limit your choices• Influence behaviors

Page 13: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

IMPACT OF SES ON HEALTH

• Low Socioeconomic Status = difficulty accessing health care + poorest health outcomes

• Health status improves at each step up the income and social hierarchy

• High income determines living conditions such as safe housing and ability to buy sufficient good food

• The healthiest populations are those in societies which are prosperous and have an equitable distribution of wealth

Page 14: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS AS A SDOH

“It is one of the greatest of contemporary social

injustices that people who live in the most disadvantaged circumstances have more

illnesses, more disability and shorter lives than those who are more affluent”

(Benzeval, Judge, & Whitehead, 1995, p.1)

Page 15: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS AS A SDOH

“Poverty can affect health in a number of ways. Income provides the prerequisites for health,

such as shelter, food, warmth, and the ability to participate in society; living in poverty can cause stress and anxiety which can damage people’s health; and low income limits peoples’ choices

and militates against desirable changes in behaviour.”

(Benzeval, Judge, & Whitehead, 1995,p.xxi)

Page 16: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

DISCUSSION

• Is is true that income impacts the health outcomes of your patients?

• Do your patients in the lowest economic bracket experience good health?

Page 17: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

GLOBAL & LOCAL CONTEXT

Page 18: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

SDOH – GLOBAL (MDG)

Millennium Development Goal 1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger

http://www.jm.undp.org/files/u80/jpeg%20FILES%20MDG/MDG1.JPG

Page 19: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

LOCAL CONTEXT

• It has been known for many decades that the profound improvements in health in Canada and other industrialized countries have been primarily due to the kind of societies in which we live, rather than advances in medicine or health care

• Low-income Canadians are more likely to die earlier and to suffer more illnesses than Canadians with higher incomes, regardless of age, sex, race and place of residence.

• At each rung up the income ladder, Canadians have less sickness, longer life expectancies and improved health.

Page 20: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

LOCAL CONTEXT

Poverty acts like a disease…

Just like high blood pressure, diabetes, cholesterol:

• Puts sufferers at risk of high morbidity and mortality through various pathways (increased risk of CVD, diabetes, depression, cancer)

• No other cause accounts for all the elevated risk• At extremes it can cause direct harm• Groups that move out of poverty experience a decrease in disease• Children who have lived in poverty have increased health risks as

adults• The finding is consistent across time, geography, and different

populations

Page 21: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

LOCAL CONTEXT

• Only 47% of Canadians in the lowest income bracket rate their health as very good or excellent, compared with 73% of Canadians in the highest income group

• Low-income Canadians are more likely to die earlier and to suffer more illnesses than Canadians with higher incomes, regardless of age, sex, race and place of residence

• At each rung up the income ladder, Canadians have less sickness, longer life expectancies and improved health

Page 22: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.
Page 23: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.
Page 24: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

LOCAL CONTEXT

• Studies suggest that the distribution of income in a given society may be a more important determinant of health than the total amount of income earned by society members. Large gaps in income distribution lead to increases in social problems and poorer health among the population as a whole

Page 25: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

LOCAL CONTEXT

There is strong and growing evidence that higher social and economic status is associated with

better health. In fact, these two factors seem to be the most important determinants of health.”

Public Health Agency of Canada (2004)

Page 26: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

POVERTY AND PRIMARY CARE

Page 27: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

WHY SHOULD FAMILY DOCTORS CARE?

• As family doctors we deal with preventative care...In fact, Income is now a part of the Preventative Health Care Checklist Forms that we use in family medicine

• Knowing that income and social status have such a profound effect on health therefore matters in our everyday work

• Advocating for our patients and finding ways to help them overcome income and social barriers is key to good health

• Recognizing the additional health risks of patients living in poverty is crucial in our everyday work

Page 28: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

PRIMARY CARE

• How do differences in income, “where we are in relation to one another” matter for primary care?

Page 29: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

POVERTY AND HEALTH

Income: Increasing poverty is seen to go hand-in-hand with increasing income inequality

Poverty directly harms the health of those with low incomes while income inequality affects the health of all

http://www.povertyandhumanrights.org/docs/incomeHealth.pdf

Page 30: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

POVERTY, INEQUALITY AND HEALTH

• No examination of the health effects of poverty can ignore the relationship between economic inequality and poverty

• Societies that are economically unequal have higher levels of poverty

http://www.povertyandhumanrights.org/docs/incomeHealth.pdf

Page 31: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

SOCIO-ECONOMIC STATUS AND HEALTH

• Those with very low socioeconomic status have the most difficulty accessing health care and usually experience the poorest health outcomes

• Those of higher socioeconomic status experience ready access to health care and increased opportunities for engaging in health-promoting behaviours and therefore have better health outcomes

• Is this true for your patients? Do your patients in the lowest economic bracket experience good health?

http://cbpp-pcpe.phac-aspc.gc.ca/topic/determinants/5/page/1mes

Page 32: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

CANMEDS ROLES: HEALTH ADVOCATE

Page 33: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

QUESTION

• What is the low income cut-off for a family of four in Toronto before tax?

Page 34: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

POVERTY IN CANADA

• Income is now a part of the Preventative Health Care Checklist Forms that we use in family medicine

• What is the low income cut-off for a family of four in Toronto before tax? ($41,198)

• Cut-offs change depending on where you live (rural vs. urban, population size)

Gary Bloch MD CCFPSt. Michael’s Hospital DFCM

Assistant Professor, DFCM, UofT

Page 35: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

ARGUMENTS FOR ADDRESSING POVERTY IN PRIMARY CARE

• Argument 1: This is required by the fundamentals of family medicine (health advocate, communicator, resource to a defined community)

• Argument 2: Poverty is a major risk factor for disease so requires intervention

• Argument 3: Poverty is a disease and warrants treatment like any other

Gary Bloch MD CCFPSt. Michael’s Hospital DFCM

Assistant Professor, DFCM, UofT

Page 36: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

HOW CAN FAMILY DOCTORS INTERVENE AND ADVOCATE FOR THEIR PATIENTS WITH LOW

INCOMES?

Gary Bloch’s Poverty Tool – delineates ways to advocate for patients

Page 37: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.
Page 38: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.
Page 39: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.
Page 40: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.
Page 41: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.
Page 42: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

PREVENTATIVE CARE CHECKLIST

Page 43: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

ACTIVITY

• Imagine you are a single person on Ontario Works. Your receive $592 per month. Write down your usual monthly expenses excluding rent. Calculate how much money you would have left for rent once you had taken care of all other expenses in a given month.

• What kind of monthly income is needed in Toronto for someone to meet their basic needs (food, shelter, electricity, transport)?

• What is the minimum amount you could live on per month with your current rent/mortgage?

• What months are most expensive in Toronto?

Page 44: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

ACTIVITY - DEBATE

“Doctors to Governments: Tax us. Canada is worth it!”

Doctors For Fair Taxation

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o_GsqskLvaw

Debate: Be it resolved that doctors as health advocates,

should pay higher taxes

Page 45: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

ACTIVITY

Divide into groups of 4

Brainstorm ways in which Canadian family doctors can advocate to enhance equality:

a) On behalf of their patients?

• (disability forms – WSIB/ ODSP/CPP, welfare supplements – transport/medical supplies/special diet, tax forms-child benefits, old age security and guaranteed income supplement, disability benefits, social worker referral)

b) On behalf of society?

• (fair taxation, advocate for public services and systems, advocate for income equality, ensure employees have benefits)

Page 46: PRESENTER TOOL – REVISED FALL 2013 INCOME AND SOCIAL STATUS.

ACTION PLAN

• After today’s workshop, make a list of tangible action plans to implement in your respective practices.