The majority of indicator values are drawn from the Public Health Outcomes Framework. Inequality summary measures, for the most part, have been calculated by OHID for the Health Inequalities Dashboard, using data from several OHID Fingertips profiles including the Public Health Outcomes Framework, the Local Tobacco Control Profiles and the ...
Health inequalities are unfair and avoidable differences in health across the population, and between different groups within society. These include how long people are likely to live, the health conditions they may experience and the care that is available to them. The conditions in which we are born, grow, live, work and age can impact […]
Inequalities in mortality involving common physical health conditions, England: 21 March 2021 to 31 January 2023 What's in the bulletin? Age-standardised mortality rates (ASMRs) were higher among males than females for all-cause mortality and most individual conditions; however, females had higher rates of mortality involving asthma and dementia.
Evidence suggests that recent events, such as the COVID-19 pandemic and the cost-of-living crisis, have made health inequalities worse.The four UK nations have developed various strategies to tackle inequalities – for example, the Labour Government’s Manifesto recognises that the UK has stark health inequalities and, as part of its broader health mission, commits to tackling the social ...
The 10-year health plan must take every opportunity to align with the goals set out in the health mission and its strategy for tackling health inequalities. NHS England should ensure that outcomes and process measures around tackling health inequalities are embedded within integrated care boards’ (ICBs) performance management structures.
The experience of health inequality in the UK is some of the worst in Western Europe, with an average gap of 19 years in healthy life expectancy between the most and least deprived areas. The causes of these gaps are varied and complex, but there is little doubt that they are made worse by the experience of the kind of deep poverty that has ...
It presents measures of inequality for 19 indicators, mostly drawn from the Public Health Outcomes Framework (PHOF). Data are available for a number of dimensions of inequality.
People in the most deprived areas of England are almost twice as likely to be admitted to hospital for infectious disease as those in least deprived areas, a report from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) has found.1 It also found that people from more deprived areas were disproportionately affected by radiation, chemical, climate, and environmental hazards that have direct health effects ...
The Health and Social Care Act 2012(3) introduced a new system for public health in England. Public Health England was established and local authorities once again took a lead role in public health. Whilst there were no longer specific targets to reduce health inequalities as there had been previously, the Act placed a new legal duty on
The impact of Covid-19 on health inequalities. Covid-19 has had an unequal impact on different population groups and has exacerbated existing health inequalities in England. Mortality rates from Covid-19 have been higher in more deprived areas than in less deprived areas. Up to March 2022, the Covid-19 mortality rate was 2.6 times higher for ...
Influence of a wide range of factors. Health inequalities are caused by a wide range of factors. Worse health outcomes occur when people have limited access to health care, experience poorer-quality care, and practise more risky health-related behaviours (for example, smoking).. These factors are often influenced by wider determinants such as income, housing, environment, transport, education ...
To help health and social care organisations understand and address health inequalities, we’ve published a new Health Equity report. There are big inequalities in the health of different ethnic groups. Inequalities exist across a range of dimensions, such as socio-economic deprivation and personal characteristics like age and sex.
This article is based on the premise that many of the causes and manifestations of health inequalities in the United Kingdom and the United States have been described and are largely understood (Marmot and Wilkinson 1999; Berkman and Kawachi 2000).While further understandings are still required, much less is understood about the formulation and implementation of policies to tackle such ...
Quantifying health inequalities is vital to better focus policies designed to address them. This analysis uses a novel approach to explore the extent of diagnosed health inequalities across different population groups in England. ... The stages of inequality in ill health shown here strengthens the case for a life course approach to public ...
The UKHSA estimated that, as well as the costs to the social, physical and mental health of communities, “inequalities in emergency infectious disease hospital admissions cost the NHS between £ ...
The official blog of the UK Health Security Agency, providing expert insight on the organisation's work and all aspects of health security ... What else is PHE doing to help local areas address health inequalities. PHE, alongside the Local Government Association and the Association of Directors of Public Health, will shortly be publishing ...