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SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS
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• Rank or status in a social hierarchy
• Access and consumption of goods, services, and knowledge
• measure of income, educ, and occupation
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PSYCHONEUROIMMUNOLOGY
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12 SDH identified @ YORK U conference (courseware p8)
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· Aboriginal status · Early life
· Education · job & work conditions
· Food security · Health care services
· Housing · Income and distribut'n
· Gender · Social safety net
· Social exclusion · no job/security
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Social determinants of health include both social and economic circumstances that influence the health of _____, _____, and _____ (purple, p3-1).
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Social determinants of health include both social and economic circumstances that influence the health of _____, _____, and _____ (purple, p3-1).
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Social determinants of health are the conditions where people are _____, _____, _____, ____ and _____
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_____ _____ __ _____ are the conditions where people are born, grow, live, work and age
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SDH determine the degree a person has the _____, _____, and _____ resources to identify and achieve personal aspirations, satisfy needs, and cope with the environment” (a broader definition) (2rr3 p3-1)
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SDH determine the degree a person has the physical, social, and personal resources to identify and achieve _____ _____, satisfy _____, and _____ with the environment” (a broader definition) (2rr3 p3-1)
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SDH are about the _____ and ____ of a variety of resources that a society makes available to it’s members
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SDH are about the quantity and quality of a variety of _____ that a society makes available to it’s members
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Resources
that a society makes available to it’s members
(2rr3 p3)
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• conditions of childhood • income
• education: availability and quality
• food • housing
• employment • working conditions
• health and social services
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To improve how society organizes and distributes _____ and _____ resources, _____ and _____ polices need to change, and political, economic, and social forces influencing policy decisions examined (2rr3 p3)
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To improve how society organizes and distributes economic and social resources, economic and social polices need to change, and _____, _____, and _____ forces influencing policy decisions examined (2rr3 p3)
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People with higher incomes spend less time in the _____, have less _____ and _____ illness |
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People with _____ _____ spend less time in the hospital, have less medical illnesses and have less mental illness
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SES and it's correlation to Health
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Ottawa Charter for
Health Promotion |
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• enabling ppl more control over their health
• allowing people to improve their health
• create well-being
(needs satisfied and ability to cope) |
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“ the capacity of people to adapt to, respond to, or control life’s challenges and changes”
Health is positive - more than absence of disease.
a state of physical, mental and social well being
Health is a capacity or resource.
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Definition
The range of personal, social, economic, environmental, biological factors which determine the health status of individuals or populations.
either modifiable (e.g. poverty) or unmodifiable (e.g. age)
are not easily modifiable; require action from individuals, organizations, governments, communities, etc.
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MAJOR social, economic and cultural environment Determinants of health |
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• income
• employment
• education
• social status
•social networks
• social cohesion
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Major Physical Environment
determinants of health |
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Definition
natural and built
air, land, food & water quality, housing density,
safety of products,
living/working conditions,
impact of technology
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MAJOR Personal Health Practices
determinants of health |
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Definition
Behaviours that enhance or create risks to health
• smoking • physical activity
• eating behaviours • alcohol
• driving behaviours etc.)
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MAJOR Individual Coping Skills
determinants of health |
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Definition
coping with stress and adversity |
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MAJOR Health Services
determinants of health |
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access to and utilization of
• preventive
• restortive services
• palliative care |
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MAJOR Human Biology
determinants of health |
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• Biological and genetic endowment
• exposure to biological threats |
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In terms of funding, more public money is spent on
_____ _____ _____ than on any other determinant.
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In terms of _____, more public money is spent on
health care services than on any other determinant.
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Risky behaviours may account for nearly half of all deaths - function of _____, _____, _____ and _____
factors.
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_____ behaviours may account for nearly half of all deaths - function of individual, social, economic and environmental
factors.
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"Public Views" of Determinants of Health
- Personal lifestyle factors -
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** these factors have a very strong or strong impact on the health of Canadians
• eating habits (72%)
• amount of exercise (65%)
• smoking (80%)
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"Public Views" of Determinants of Health
- Broader determinants: -
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• SES - level of income (33%)
• availability of quality housing (34%)
• person’s level of education (33%)
• safety of communities (35%)
influenced the health of Canadians |
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DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH
(unit 2 slide 13) |
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Definition
• Income • social status
• social support • education
• employment conditions • gender
• social enviro • physical enviro
• healthy child development • culture
• biology & genetic endowment
• health services
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What is Income Inequality? |
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Definition
Different from absolute deprivation (poverty)
- Poverty definition in Canada ~ $20,000 for 2 people
- Developing countries $1.00/person/day
Distribution of income (gap) between the rich and poor.
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Why is income inequality
traditionally important indicator?
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Definition
Poverty reduction - both growth and income distribution matter
Bad for growth – weakens the rate at which growth is converted to poverty reduction
(slice of economic pie captured by poor).
Social justice – indication of politically sustainable and fair economic policies.
Good standardized indicator - one of the 10 sustainable development indicators used in Europe.
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Income Inequality and Health: Three plausible pathways
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Definition
1. Access to life opportunities (ie., political participation, education, competitive spending)
2. Erosion of social cohesion – “social capital” (i.e., trust, mutual aid, access to services)
3. Psychosocial and chronic stress (i.e.,social support, hopelessness, sense of control, job security).
Diseases are stress related – heart attack, cancer, depression, etc.
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Seek the Cause in Incidence
Not the Cause of Cases
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Definition
To reduce a population's level of chronic disease
• seek the "causes of incidence" that shift entire risk factor distributions at the population level,
• not simply the "causes of cases" at the individual level of analysis/clinical level of investigation |
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Renewing our Public Health Principles
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Seek the root causes of disease and disability - a focus on determinants
Consider and deal with whole populations
- overweight and obesity are population level concerns!
Understand and apply the principles of social change, over the life course
Open to all solutions (“interdisciplinary thinking”)
BUT... beware of co-option by the clinical care system
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Changing Trends: Globalization of Food
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Definition
“Global corporations are establishing industrialized agro-food systems in almost all nations that will provide constant 24/7/365 consumer access to virtually unlimited volumes of relatively inexpensive [calorie-dense] foods to all people in all places at all times through supermarket, catering, vending, takeout, home delivered, drive through and fast/snack foods”.
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Changing Trends:
Activity
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Definition
• Habitual use of cars even for short trips
• Inadequate public transportation
• Urban designs, e.g., no sidewalks OR bike paths
• remote control, big-screen TVs
• Labor saving devices
• Computer & Internet
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Definition
• Building designs
• Parenting styles and family meals
• Food is everywhere
• Diversity in food products
• Female body image standards
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Moving beyond Education:
Rationale for Environmental and Policy Approaches
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Definition
• Behaviour is influenced by psychosocial & physical enviro.
• Causes are complex and culturally rooted.
• Need to change community and social norms to effect behaviour change (e.g., tobacco experience)
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Putting it all together.... A Multilevel Program Approach
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Definition
Multilevel Program Approach = 4E’s
• Education
• Environmental supports / controls
• Economic levers
• Enforcement of legislation and regulations
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Putting it all together....
A Multilevel Program Approach
cont’d
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Definition
• Stages of Life
Child, adolescent, young adult, middle age, older adult, elderly
• Relevant Settings
School, workplace, community, etc.
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Example of Multilevel Program Approach
(Effective, Feasible and Necessary)
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ENCOURAGE HEALTHY EATING IN CHILDREN AND YOUTH
• Education: school-based; community-based (media).
• Environmental supports: social norms; access to healthy foods in high school cafeterias; universal access to recreation programs regardless of socioeconomic status.
• Economic levers: healthier foods at a lower price.
• Enforcement of legislation and regulations: restrict food advertising to children.
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