Title: Chapter 3 SOCIAL INEQUALITIES, SOCIAL JUSTICE AND HEALTH
1Chapter 3 SOCIAL INEQUALITIES, SOCIAL JUSTICE
AND HEALTH
D.F.Marks, M.Murray, B.Evans, C.Willig,
C.Woodall C.M. Sykes (2005) Health
Psychology Theory, Research Practice (2nd
edition). London Sage. Starred authors feature
in video-clips
2SOCIAL INEQUALITIES, SOCIAL JUSTICE AND HEALTH
- Introduction
- Social inequality and health
- Explanations for social inequalities and health
- Reducing inequalities
- Stigma
- Social justice and health
- Summary
3INTRODUCTION
- Since the 17th century, the link between income
and health has been established. - In France in the 1820s Villerme found a
relationship between wealth and health across
Parisian neighbourhoods. - Engels in England in 1845 wrote about the
appalling living conditions of working people in
Manchester. - In the 1980s, the Black Report showed that a
class gradient existed in the UK, such that
unskilled manual workers consistently had poorer
health status than those classified as
professionals. - Health differences are very robust and resistant
to intervention as they have existed for 100s of
years.
4The Condition of the Working Class in England in
1844 (Engels, 1845)
- Engels 1845 book provided a detailed
description of the appalling living and working
conditions and the limited healthcare of working
class residents of Manchester. He wrote - All of these adverse factors combine to
undermine the health of the workers. Very few
strong, well-built, healthy people are to be
found among them Their weakened bodies are in
no condition to withstand illness and whenever
infection is abroad they fall victims to it.
This is proved by the available statistics of
death rates (pp. 118-119). - Engels compared the death rates within the city
and found that they were much higher in the
poorer districts. Further, he realised the
importance of early development and noted
common observation shows how the sufferings of
childhood are indelibly stamped on the adults
(p. 115).
5THE HEALTH GRADIENT
- The persistent health differences across classes
or socioeconomic groups are referred to as the
health gradient. This graph illustrates the
gradient with a plot of mortality against social
position labeled here as A to E - When mortality is the outcome measure, a more
- apposite term would be mortality or death
gradient.
6Health inequalities
- Inequalities are considered as reflecting
- A problem within rich countries
- A failure of health care systems
- A technical problem to be addressed by improving
access to services among those with poorer health - Lifestyle, behavioural or cultural differences
between socio-economic or ethnic groups that can
be solved through health education and promotion - Possibly also genetic differences between groups
7Health inequalities
- Are universal in both rich and poor countries
- Are the consequence of economic, educational and
environmental differences - Are impossible to solve by the health care system
alone - Are amenable to reduction by intervention at a
societal level
8Health gradients are universal
- Health gradients have been studied in rich
countries for many years where the health of
poorest of the rich is worse than that of the
richest of the rich. - Recent research shows that health gradients also
exist in poor countries among the poorest of the
poor (see chapter 2 for more details).
9Explaining the gradients more than simply
lifestyle
- We have to explain not only why the poorest
members of rich societies have higher rates of
disease, but also why health follows a social
gradient. The usual explanation for inequalities
in health is lifestyle. There are clear
socioeconomic differences in smoking and other
unhealthy types of behavior that are risk factors
for coronary artery disease. Yet controlling for
these factors had little effect on the
socioeconomic differences in coronary heart
disease in the study by Diez Roux et al.
Something in addition to smoking, physical
activity, hypertension, diabetes, low-density
lipoprotein cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein
cholesterol, and body-mass index must be
responsible for the differences in the incidence
of heart disease.
10SOCIAL INEQUALITY AND HEALTH
- The health gradient is illustrative of the
reliable inequalities that exist between people
of different socioeconomic status (SES) - Those in the lower social classes tend to have
lower life expectancies and are at higher risk of
ill health. - These inequalities exist throughout the lifespan
for both men and women.
11SOCIAL INEQUALITY AND HEALTH
- Health inequalities can be viewed from an
ecological perspective or systems theory
approach. - This approach presents developmental influences
as four nested systems - - Microsystems
- Mesosystems
- Exosystems
- Macrosystems
- These systems are reflected in the onion or
rainbow framework of Dahlgren and Whitehead.
12SCIENTIFIC EXPLANATIONS FOR SOCIAL INEQUALITIES
IN HEALTH
- There are several scientific explanations for
social inequalities in health - Psychosocial
- Neo-material
- Statistical artifact
- Health selection
- Mechanisms are likely to be complex, multileveled
and change over time.
13Psychosocial explanations
- Micro-level (social status)Income inequality
results in invidious processes of social
comparison that enforce social hierarchies
causing chronic stress leading to poorer health
outcomes for those at the bottom - Macro-level (social cohesion) Income inequality
erodes social bonds that allow people to work
together, decreases social resources, and results
in low trust and civic participation, greater
crime, and other unhealthy conditions.
14Neo-material explanations
- Micro-leve(individual incme) Income inequality
means fewer economic resources among the poorest,
resulting in lessened - ability to avoid risks, cure injury or disease,
and/or prevent illness - Macro-level (social disinvestment) Income
inequality results in less investment in social
and environmental conditions (safe housing, good
schools, etc.) necessary for promoting health
among the poorest
15Statistical artefact explanations
- The poorest in any society are usually the
sickest. - A society with high levels of income inequality
has high numbers of poor and consequently will
have more people who are sick. - There is little empirical support for his
explanation.
16Health selection explanations
- People are not sick because they are poor.
Rather, poor health lowers ones income and
limits ones earning potential. - There is little empirical support for his
explanation.
17LAY EXPLANATIONS FOR SOCIAL INEQUALITIES IN HEALTH
- Lay explanations of social inequalities in health
include peoples immediate social and physical
environment. - Inequalities found in terms of class, race and
gender are linked with issues of social and
material exploitation such as institutional
racism, gender discrimination, corporate
globalization, degradation of the environment,
destruction of the public sector, etc.
18EXPLANATIONS FOR SOCIAL INEQUALITIES IN HEALTH
- The persons living/working environments are also
significant determinants of health. - There is a growing interest in the role of social
capital in explaining the social variations in
health. - Social capital refers to the degree of civic
engagement, levels of interpersonal trust and - norms of reciprocity within the society.
19REDUCING INEQUALITIES
- Tackling inequalities in health should involve
different levels of intervention (Whitehead,
1995) - Strengthening individuals
- Strengthening communities
- Improving access to essential facilities and
services - Encouraging macro-economic and cultural change
20HEALTH AND PLACE
- Although the evidence linking ill-health and
poverty is clearly established there is also
evidence of regional or area variations. This
has given rise to a growing program of research
on health and place that has explored how major
structural changes, such as those itemized above,
lead to ill-health. - Taylor et al. (1997) have described the features
of healthy and unhealthy environments - Across multiple environments, unhealthy
environments are those that threaten safety, that
undermine the creation of social ties, and that
are conflictual, abusive or violent. A healthy
environment, in contrast, provides safety,
opportunities for social integration, and the
ability to predict and/or control aspects of that
environment. (Taylor et al., 1997, p. 411).
21NEIGHBOURHOODS
- Diex Roux et al. (2001) investigated how a
persons local neighbourhood can act as an
independent predictor of health using data from
the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study
(ARIC Investigators, 1989). Diez Roux
investigated the relationship between
neighbourhood characteristics and the incidence
of coronary heart disease among residents of four
localities in the US. A summary score for the
socioeconomic environment of each neighbourhood
included information about wealth and income,
education, and occupation. - During a median of 9.1 years of follow-up, 615
coronary events occurred in 13,009 participants.
Residents of disadvantaged neighbourhoods (those
with lower summary scores) had a higher risk of
disease than residents of advantaged
neighbourhoods, even after controlling for
personal income, education and occupation. These
findings show that, even after controlling for
personal income, education, and occupation,
living in a disadvantaged neighborhood is
associated with an increased incidence of
coronary heart disease.
22Marmot (2001)
- Walk the slums of Dhaka, in Bangladesh, or
Accra, in Ghana, and it is not difficult to see
how the urban environment of poor countries could
be responsible for bad health. Walk north from
Manhattan's museum district to Harlem, or east
from London's financial district to its old East
End, and you will be struck by the contrast
between rich and poor, existing cheek by jowl. It
is less immediately obvious why there should be
health differences between rich and poor areas of
the same city. It is even less obvious, from
casual inspection of the physical environment,
why life expectancy for young black men in Harlem
should be less than in Bangladesh.
23ETHNICITY CORRELATES WITH PLACE
- Ethnic variations in health within rich
countries are very large. For example, white men
in the 10 "healthiest" counties in the US have a
life expectancy above 76.4 years while black men
in the 10 least healthy counties have a life
expectancy of 61 years in Philadelphia, 60 in
Baltimore and New York, and 57.9 in the District
of Columbia. The main determinants of the excess
deaths among Harlem men are circulatory disease,
homicide, and HIV infection. - The study by Diez Roux et al (2001) suggests
that socioeconomic characteristics of
communities, in addition to individual
characteristics such as income, education, and
occupation, are related to the incidence of
coronary events.
24Three theoretical approaches to the study of
health and place
- Hazard exposure Physical and biological risk
factors are spatially distributed. This approach
posits a direct pathway between hazard exposure
and health risk - Social relationships Space and place shapes the
character of social relationships and in turn
psychosocial and behavioural risk factors - Sense of place and subjective meanings This
approach considers the shared social meanings
people have of their community. - Source Curtis Rees Jones, 1998
25Explaining inequalities
- The studies reviewed above suggest that
behavioural, material and local circumstances
vary with SES. It is impossible to decide with
the presently available information how much each
of these causes is contributing to the gradients
in illnesses and deaths. Understanding the
material, behavioural and locality-based causes
and the interactions between the three is a
priority for further research.
26STIGMA and DISABILITY
- Stigma refers to unfavourable reactions towards
people when they are perceived to possess
attributes that are denigrated. - It has detrimental effects to a persons sense of
identity and can act as a form of social
oppression through rationing of resources,
services, research funding/efforts and care to
these individuals/groups.
27STIGMA AND DISABILITY
- Stigmatisation can be found in all cultures
throughout history. - Multidisciplinary research is needed to further
explore how stigma is related to health,
disability and social justice. - Current debates about abortion of impaired
fetuses and legislation of euthanasia revolve
around the pervasive devaluation of people with
disabilities, and the negative assumptions about
their lower quality of life.
28QUALITY OF LIFE, ABORTION AND DISABILITY
- Disability rights organisations argue that
abortion decisions should not be made on the
grounds that disabled people have a lower Quality
of Life (QOL). This has an anti-eugenetist
dimension. - The rationales for screening and termination
include assumptions that people with disabilities
are more costly to society, that the lives of
children with disabilities are harmful to their
families and that some impairments involve a
level of suffering and misery that makes them not
worth living. - The way professionals describe test results and
the influence of the advice they give is also a
concern. The advice given, while often subtle,
most frequently encourages termination in
response to potential impairment results and most
testing takes place within a plan-to-abort
context (Rinck Calkins, 1996).
29ABORTION AND DISABILITY
- There is a tension between this argument and the
feminist position that women have a categorical
right to make decisions about their own bodies
including the decision to terminate an unwanted
pregnancy. - However, the disability movement position is not
against abortion itself, rather it revolves
around the bases upon which the decision is made.
- Aborting a specific foetus on the basis of a
devalued attribute is different from aborting any
foetus on the basis of not wanting to have a
child at that time (Fine Asch, 1982). The
disability movement also asserts the rights of
disabled women to have children. - This fundamental human right is denied to many
women, particularly those with cognitive and
emotional impairments, as the additional support
and resources that they need to allow them to
raise a child are often not available.
30Disability and QOL
- A recent review by Gill (2000) challenges this
assumption. In general, people with disabilities
have rated their quality of life as good to
excellent (e.g. Eisenberg Saltz, 1991). - Where found, lower quality of life ratings may
have related to more to sociodemographic factors
(e.g. poverty, exclusion, lack of social support)
than disability per se (Asch, 1998).
Consistently, research has failed to show an
association between diminishing quality of life
and increasing severity of physical impairment
(e.g. Viermero Krause, 1998). - Many factors mediate quality of life but overall
the research indicates that life satisfaction is
good for people with disabilities and that they
derive satisfaction through finding a sense of
meaning, performing expected social roles,
enjoying reciprocal relationships and a sense of
living in a reciprocal social world (Albrecht
Devlieger, 1999).
31Negative attitudes in health care
- Despite no empirical basis suggesting compromised
quality of life, healthcare professionals
consistently and significantly underestimate it
in people with disabilities. - Negative attitudes inform decision-making and are
communicated, directly and indirectly to their
patients and patients families. - Negative attitudes about people with disabilities
include underestimating quality of life,
underestimating future capabilities (especially
for children), overestimating depression, viewing
it a normal and inevitable response (therefore
not treating it) and underestimating the
functional ability to commit suicide. - Health care professionals have to make explicit
decisions about whether to assist a patient who
asks for help to die. They also have to make less
explicit decisions around provision of
life-sustaining treatment (e.g. whether to
withhold heart operations for Down Syndrome
children).
32Assisted dying and disability
- Disability prejudices held by health care
professionals result in unsupported assumptions
that the quality of life of people with
disabilities is diminished - There are a number of forms of assisted dying
including a person ending their own life by their
choice using a tool supplied by someone else,
someone else ending a persons life with their
consent, someone else ending a persons life
without their consent and withholding
life-sustaining treatment (with or without
persons consent). - All of these forms of assisted-dying have been
applied to people with disabilities. That
assisted-dying can refer to without the consent
of the person who dies is particularly worrying. - It has been suggested that many people with
disabilities fear that episodes of illness may be
viewed as an opportunity to allow them
merciful release (Marks, 1999), and there may
be some basis - for this.
33Disability issues of social justice
- The two debates discussed above are about the
differential value placed on the lives on people
with versus without disabilities/illnesses. As
Charmaz, (1999) suggests, people with a chronic
illness become viewed as worth less which may
eventually contract into worthless. Stigmatised
individuals are regarded as flawed, compromised,
less than fully human (Heatherton et al., 2000)
and, in the case of people with disabilities,
worthless and lives not worth living. Being
judged as not worth living may represent the most
fundamental claim to injustice and inequality
(Saxton, 1998).
34SOCIAL JUSTICE AND HEALTH
- A health psychology committed to social justice
needs to address the needs of the most
disadvantaged in society. - Critics of the research into social inequalities
in health often charge that social inequalities
are both an inevitable part of life and also are
necessary for social progress. - An alternative perspective is to consider not
simply inequalities per se but inequities in
health. As Dahlgren and Whitehead (1991) argue,
health inequalities can be considered as
inequities when they are avoidable, unnecessary
and unfair. - Their approach is derived from the theory of
justice as fairness developed by the moral
philosopher John Rawls (1999).
35Justice as fairness
- According to Rawls there are certain underlying
principles of a just society - Assure people equal basic liberties including
guaranteeing the right of political participation - Provide a robust form of equal opportunity
- Limited inequalities to those that benefit the
least advantaged - When these principles are met citizens can be
confident that they are respected by others and
can acquire a sense of self-worth. -
36Adhering to principles of fairness would address
basic social inequalities in health (Daniels et
al., 2000)
- Assuring people equal basic liberties implies
that everyone has an equal right to fully
participate in politics. This will in turn
contribute to improvements in health since
according to social capital theory political
participation is an important social determinant
of health. - Providing active measures to promote equal
opportunities implies the introduction of
measures to reduce socio-economic inequalities
and other social obstacles to equal
opportunities. Such measures would include
comprehensive childcare and childhood
interventions to combat any disadvantages of
family background. They would also include
comprehensive healthcare for all including
support services for those with disabilities. - A just society would allow only those
inequalities in income and wealth that would
benefit the least advantaged. This requires
direct challenge to the contemporary neo-liberal
philosophy that promotes the maximization of
profit and increasing the extent of social
inequality.
37Psychologists and social justice
- Increasingly psychologists have recognized the
link between poor social conditions, social
inequalities and physical and mental health. In
2000 the American Psychological Association
passed a landmark resolution on Poverty and
Socioeconomic Status. This resolution called for
a program of research on the causes and impact of
poverty, negative attitudes towards people living
in poverty, strategies to reduce poverty, and the
evaluation of anti-poverty programs. This
resolution has been followed by a number of
initiatives.
38Psychologists and social justice
- Bullock and Lott (2001) developed a research and
advocacy agenda on issues of economic justice.
Such an agenda is not just concerned with
describing the impact of poverty and inequality
on health and wellbeing but also with advocating
for social and economic justice.This includes - Challenging the victim-blaming ideology that is
often adopted in psychological approaches to the
study of health and illness. - Defining health psychology not as an observer of
social injustice but rather as a resource for
social change (Murray and Campbell, 2003). - A more politically engaged health psychology such
as the one championed by Martin-Baro (1994) who
challenged psychologists to adopt a preferential
option for the poor.
39Psychologists and social justice
- Three approaches have been suggested by Fine and
Barreras (2001) - Public policy documenting the impact of
regressive social policies and agitating against
such policies - Popular education challenging popular
victim-blaming beliefs (common-sense) about the
causes of ill-health - Community organizing working with marginalized
communities and agitating for social change.
40Building alliances
- The success of such a strategy requires building
alliances with social groups most negatively
impacted by social inequalities. These can range
from patient-rights groups to trade unions and
other activist groups (Steinitz and Mishler,
2001). As Martin-Baro (1994) stressed the
concern of the social scientist should not be so
much to explain the world as to transform it (p.
19). By adopting this approach health psychology
can begin to move from the sidelines to a more
central role in the broader movement to promoting
a healthier society.
41Summary
- 1.Health and illness are conditioned by social
conditions There is a clear relationship between
income and health leading to the development of a
social gradient. - 2.Psycho-social explanations of these social
variations include perceived inequality, stress,
lack of control and less social connection. - 3.Material explanations of the social gradient in
health include reduced income and reduced access
to services. - 4.Political factors connect both psycho-social
and material explanations in a broader causal
chain
42Summary (continued)
- 5.Lay explanations of social inequalities in
health include peoples immediate social and
physical environment. Social environment
includes the character of peoples social
relationships and their connection with the
community. - 6.Stigma is concerned with the disqualification
of individuals because they have certain socially
devalued attributes. - 7. Social justice is concerned with providing
equal opportunities for all citizens. A health
psychology committed to social justice needs to
orient itself to address the needs of the most
disadvantaged in society