Why are the wealthier healthier?

danmand

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Why are the wealthier healthier?



More equal societies have better health outcomes, whereas the US has a big life expectancy gap between rich and poor.
Last Modified: 20 Jun 2013 11:14
Clare Bambra, Professor of Public Health Policy and Director of the Wolfson Research Institute for Health and Wellbeing at Durham University, United Kingdom, is the author of Work, Worklessness, and the Political Economy of Health.

Most of the health gains in recent centuries were caused by far-reaching economic and political reforms [AFP]


In 1842, the English social reformer Edwin Chadwick documented a 30-year discrepancy between the life expectancy of men in the poorest social classes and that of the gentry. Today, people in the most affluent areas of the United Kingdom, such as Kensington and Chelsea, can expect to live 14 years longer than those in the poorest cities, such as Glasgow.

Such inequalities exist, to varying degrees, in all developed countries. Poorer groups fare particularly badly in the neo-liberal system of the United States; gaps in life expectancy in some US cities, such as New Orleans, are as large as 25 years.

Understanding and reducing these health inequalities remains a major public-policy challenge worldwide. It is not only a moral issue; health inequalities carry significant economic costs. But the causes of such inequalities are complex and contested, and the solutions are elusive.

The prevailing explanation for health inequalities is rooted in the social determinants of health - that is, the environments in which people work and live. Affluent people have better access to health-promoting environments, such as well-maintained schools that offer a good education, high-quality housing, and stable jobs in secure, safe settings. The poorer you are, the more exposed you are likely to be to health-damaging environments.

Various theories draw on this basic framework - and each competing explanation suggests different strategies for reducing health inequalities. For example, the "cultural-behavioural" approach explains health inequalities in terms of differences in individual behaviours, asserting that poorer people have worse health outcomes, owing to a higher propensity to smoke, drink alcohol and eat less healthy foods. This view naturally underpins interventions like targeted smoking-cessation services or health-education initiatives.

The "materialist" approach takes a broader view, arguing that people with more money can essentially purchase better health through superior education, health care and social services. Accordingly, countries can reduce health inequalities by introducing higher minimum incomes for their poorest citizens and guaranteeing universal access to public services.










Discussing US health care reform




By contrast, "psychosocial" theories suggest that it is the psychological experience of inequality - the feelings of inferiority or superiority generated by social hierarchies - that matters. This view implies that the poorest individuals and communities need to feel productive, valued, and empowered to take control of their own lives, rather than feel trapped in a subordinate position.

The "life course" approach combines multiple theories to contend that the unequal accumulation of social, psychological, and biological advantages or disadvantages over time, beginning in utero, produces health inequalities. It demands early intervention to put children on a positive health path, together with an adequate social safety net throughout citizens' lives.

The most encompassing view is that of the "political-economy" school, which argues that health inequalities are determined by capitalist economies' hierarchical structure and the associated political choices about resource distribution. This analysis calls for the most radical action: to develop an economic and social system in which resources, particularly wealth and power, are more evenly distributed.

Given that all of these theories can, to some extent, be supported by scientific evidence, politics can matter more than science in determining which strategies policymakers pursue to reduce health inequalities. After all, some potential solutions are politically easier to implement within existing systems than others.

For example, interventions aimed at changing individual behaviour are far less challenging to prevailing power structures than those that demand extensive social investment or revitalisation of the entire system. Thus, governments interested in closing the health gap - such as the British Labour government in 1997-2010 - usually end up pursuing such relatively painless "downstream" interventions.

But this approach has proved to be only partly successful in reducing health inequalities, leaving little doubt that more comprehensive measures are needed. Indeed, most of the health gains over the 19th and 20th centuries were brought about by far-reaching economic, political and social reforms.

Ultimately, more equal societies have better health outcomes. While even the most egalitarian developed countries have health inequalities, all of their citizens are better off and live longer. The poorest and most vulnerable groups in social-democratic countries like Sweden and Norway are far healthier and live longer than their counterparts in neo-liberal countries such as the UK or the US. These more egalitarian countries have also achieved comparatively stable, inclusive economic growth and a high standard of living. So, if assessed from a neutral standpoint, social democracy is clearly the better choice for all.

Clare Bambra, Professor of Public Health Policy and Director of the Wolfson Research Institute for Health and Wellbeing at Durham University, United Kingdom, is the author of Work, Worklessness, and the Political Economy of Health.
 

demien2k5

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Why are the wealthier healthier?
Simple - Less physical, mental and emotional stress associated with everyday life. Pace and cadence of responsibly living well delivers much less wear and tear than does the typical 9-5 'meat grinder' life stresses of the average work-a-day citizen.
 

TeasePlease

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Money buys convenience, therefore less stress.

Money also buys entertainment, leisure and psychological stimulation (arts, adventure, anal sex)
 

demien2k5

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Simple - Money buys happiness. Happiness results in a more positive outlook on life, which outlook has physical and psychological benefits.
Better said. Given this, I will in all likelihood live forever!:rofl:
 

shrek71

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Simple - Money buys happiness. Happiness results in a more positive outlook on life, which outlook has physical and psychological benefits.
More aptly. Money buys you freedom. Happiness is a choice. For those that are wealthy it makes sense to be in good health so that you can enjoy your wealth.

Cheers
 

versitile1

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Better food, better living conditions, top-notch health care, less stress, the list goes on and on.
 

explorerzip

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Better food, better living conditions, top-notch health care, less stress, the list goes on and on.
Yet wealthier people tend to eat fast food, processed food, more meat, more coffee, drive more, live further from work, seldom exercise, don't visit their doctor regularly, etc. All else being equal (regular access to potable water, sanitation, health care, and education) I'd say that it's more lifestyle more than wealth that determines health.

Lots of previous generations that basically grew up poor, yet still managed full and long lives.
 

FOOTSNIFFER

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Money buys a sense of CONTROL over your destiny. Studies of people in the workplace have conclusively shown that people who have a greater degree of control of their work lives experience less stress and more satisfaction. Just imagine having 10 Million in the bank and what that would do for your freedom to say FU to any vexatious situation.

Plus; money buys pussy. Women can smell it on you.
 

richaceg

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to sum it all up. You can put money in a blender and you got the cure of the century...
 

CTSblues

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Intelligence, education and income are closely related. No surprise.

Large epidemiological studies of almost an entire population in Scotland have found that intelligence (as measured by an IQ-type test) in childhood predicts substantial differences in adult morbidity and mortality, including deaths from cancers and cardiovascular diseases. These relations remain significant after controlling for socioeconomic variables.

http://www.aei.org/files/2006/02/22/20060131_GottfredsonIntelligence.pdf
 

Ceiling Cat

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People with higher incomes can afford to eat healthier foods, like buying more expensive vegetables and fruit out of season. They can buy fish. Usually fish is bought by immigrants and wealthy people that know that fish in the diet is good for you. Poor people will not buy halibut steaks, they will buy fish sticks which is not too healthy for people. Then they burn them cooking and eat the carcinogens in the burn bits. Lower income people eat a lot of hot dogs, hamburgers and cheese and macaroni, where the cheese is actually cheese flavored powder.
 

johnhenrygalt

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Members of certain groups in the USA are more likely to be shot to death by other members of their group, thus lowering average life expectancy for them.
 

oldjones

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Members of certain groups in the USA are more likely to be shot to death by other members of their group, thus lowering average life expectancy for them.
Although not the aspects of life expectancy that relate to medical care, unless you're saying such folks bleed out on the streets because they can't get any.

Generally in civilized societies, such stats are collected to identify issues that need attention, intervention and active redress, not to excuse failure, meanness and apathy. Or are you suggesting there's an irremediable genetic link between death by gunshot and race.
 

Laird

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Higher rates of obesity in the lower class. I'd argue it's more a result of innate disposition and cultural values than money.
 

versitile1

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Yet wealthier people tend to eat fast food, processed food, more meat, more coffee, drive more, live further from work, seldom exercise, don't visit their doctor regularly, etc. All else being equal (regular access to potable water, sanitation, health care, and education) I'd say that it's more lifestyle more than wealth that determines health.

Lots of previous generations that basically grew up poor, yet still managed full and long lives.
Ok, so what's the average lifespan in poor countries vs. wealthy countries? What does one need in order to improve their lifestyle?
 

euripides

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To wake up each day with the desire to explore one's environment and to have the security to be able to supplement and carry out that curiosity, is an opiate for long life. Material wealth can help with that security but it is not a complete replacement for true self confidence.
 

Brolaf

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They rejuvenate themselves by bathing in the blood of the plebs :p
 

CapitalGuy

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I do wonder if the broad correlation between wealth and education level have something to do with it?
 
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