To be poor is by definition to have less of the good things in life, including health
and longevity. Obtaining equal access to care is a major step in improving health,
however, improved access to health services is only part of the solution for advancing
health, avoiding illnesses and enhancing well-being. Th e fact remains that people at
the bottom of society are faced with the worst living conditions and report the worst
health outcomes. Regardless the country these poor people live in, what type of health
insurance they have or do not have, and the level of health care they receive, they still
have the worst health of all. These disparities cannot be explained by biological differences.
The World Health Organization holistically viewed the social determinants
of health, concluding that global health and illness follow a social gradient; lower
socioeconomic positions are consistently correlated with poorer health. Th ese avoidable
health inequalities arise because of the circumstances in which people are born,
live, work, and age, including the adequacy of health care systems. Th e conditions in
which people live and die are, in turn, shaped by social and economic forces. Together,
the structural determinants and conditions of daily life constitute the socioeconomic
determinants of health. These are responsible for a major part of health inequities between
and within countries, and constitute one form of social injustice. Global action
focused on the socioeconomic determinants of health is necessary to achieve health
equity. Since neighbourhoods and communities are amendable to intervention, they
are the most appropriate social levels at which to improve the health of populations.
Most human development programs seek as a primary goal to improve the subjective
well-being of those most aff ected by poverty. In 2000, 189 countries signed the
United Nations Millennium Declaration, which set eight Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs) to be achieved by 2015. Th ese MDGs aim to decrease poverty, inequality
and improve health and subjective well-being; the latter is increasingly recognized
as an important additional source for the evaluation of broad societal and economic
development. Communities and neighbourhoods with high levels of subjective
well-being are essential for health equity. An accumulating body of knowledge has
shown that subjective well-being is a strong predictor of physical health and longevity,
spurring growing interest in this factor.
http://repub.eur.nl/res/pub/21851/Jane%20BW%204e.pdf
http://repub.eur.nl/res/pub/21851/Jane%20BW%204e.pdf
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