Closing the Gap in a Generation: Health Equity through Action on the
Social Determinants of Health
World Health Organization
August 28, 2008
Inequities are killing people on a “grand scale” reports WHO’s Commission
“(The) toxic combination of bad policies, economics, and politics is, in large measure responsible for the fact that a majority of people in the world do not enjoy the good health that is biologically possible,” the Commissioners write in Closing the Gap in a Generation: Health Equity through Action on the Social Determinants of Health. “Social injustice is killing people on a grand scale.”
Wealth is not necessarily a determinant
Economic growth is raising incomes in many countries but increasing national wealth alone does not necessarily increase national health. Without equitable distribution of benefits, national growth can even exacerbate inequities.
Wealth alone does not have to determine the health of a nation’s population. Some low-income countries such as Cuba, Costa Rica, China, state of Kerala in India and Sri Lanka have achieved levels of good health despite relatively low national incomes. But, the Commission points out, wealth can be wisely used. Nordic countries, for example, have followed policies that encouraged equality of benefits and services, full employment, gender equity and low levels of social exclusion. This, said the Commission, is an outstanding example of what needs to be done everywhere.
Inequities within countries
In the United States, 886,202 deaths would have been averted between 1991 and 2000 if mortality rates between white and African Americans were equalized.
Universal Health Care
Access to and utilization of health care is vital to good and equitable health. The health-care system is itself a social determinant of health, influenced by and influencing the effect of other social determinants. Gender, education, occupation, income, ethnicity, and place of residence are all closely linked to people’s access to, experiences of, and benefits from health care. Leaders in health care have an important stewardship role across all branches of society to ensure that policies and actions in other sectors improve health equity.
The Commission advocates financing the health-care system through general taxation and/or mandatory universal insurance. Public health-care spending has been found to be redistributive in country after country. The evidence is compellingly in favour of a publicly funded health-care system. In particular, it is vital to minimize out-of-pocket spending on health care. The policy imposition of user fees for health care in low- and middle-income countries has led to an overall reduction in utilization and worsening health outcomes. Upwards of 100 million people are pushed into poverty each year through catastrophic household health costs. This is unacceptable. Health-care systems have better health outcomes when built on Primary Health Care (PHC) — that is, both the PHC model that emphasizes locally appropriate action across the range of social determinants, where prevention and promotion are in balance with investment in curative interventions, and an emphasis on the primary level of care with adequate referral to higher levels of care.
Recommendations
Based on this compelling evidence, the Commission makes three overarching recommendations to tackle the “corrosive effects of inequality of life chances”:
1. Improve daily living conditions, including the circumstances in which people are born, grow, live, work and age.
2. Tackle the inequitable distribution of power, money and resources — the structural drivers of those conditions — globally, nationally and locally.
3. Measure and understand the problem and assess the impact of action.
Press release:
http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2008/pr29/en/index.html
Executive Summary (40 pages):
http://whqlibdoc.who.int/hq/2008/WHO_IER_CSDH_08.1_eng.pdf
Full report (256 pages):
http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2008/9789241563703_eng.pdf
On this Labor Day weekend, a time that we celebrate the great contributions of American workers, the release of this report could not be more timely. Hard working Americans are experiencing the adverse consequences of the increasing inequities in the social determinants of health, inequities that really only society is equipped to address. Today, Hurricane Gustav is descending on our Gulf Coast, testing further whether we as a society can join together to meet our challenges, or if instead those affected are simply left on their own.
Please excuse me for a personal moment of introspection. For over ten years I’ve been a full-time volunteer for Physicians for a National Program. I remember well a conversation I had several years ago with David Himmelstein, a cofounder of PNHP. We observed that, while the task of achieving health care for everyone in the United States seemed almost arduous, it was a miniscule problem compared to the needs throughout the world. Ours was such a tiny task in comparison. We didn’t need more money. We merely needed to fix the way we finance health care as an essential first step to begin to address these inequities.
Ten years later one simple number gives us an inkling of the degree of our success. This report shows that over 800,000 African Americans have died prematurely in the United States in the past decade merely because we have failed to address these inequities in the social
determinants of health.
(moment of silence)
Hopefully we’ll do better with Gustav than we did with Katrina, having learned a lesson. But do we really need more lessons on the social determinants of health before we begin to act? Eight hundred thousand is far too many painful lessons for me.