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The Key to Good
Health That No One Is Talking About
By Brydie Ragan
YES! Magazine
Wednesday 25 July
2007
The public
generally believes that poor lifestyle choices, faulty genes and
infectious agents are the major factors that give rise to illness.
Here's the rest of the story.
Research now tells
us that lower socio-economic status may be more harmful to health than risky
personal habits....
I recently saw a
billboard for an employment service that said, "If you think cigarette
smoking is bad for your health, try a dead-end job." This warning may not
just be an advertising quip: public health research now tells us that lower
socio-economic status may be more harmful to health than risky personal
habits, such as smoking or eating junk food.
In 1967, British
epidemiologist Michael Marmot began to study the relationship between
poverty and health. He showed that each step up or down the socio-economic
ladder correlates with increasing or decreasing health.
Over time,
research linking health and wealth became more nuanced. It turns out that
"what matters in determining mortality and health in a society is less the
overall wealth of that society and more how evenly wealth is distributed.
The more equally wealth is distributed, the better the health of that
society," according to the editors of the April 20, 1996 issue of the
British Medical Journal. In that issue, American epidemiologist George
Kaplan and his colleagues showed that the disparity of income in each of the
individual U.S. states, rather than the average income per state, predicted
the death rate.
"The People's
Epidemiologists," an article in the March/April 2006 issue of Harvard
Magazine, takes the analysis a step further. Fundamental social forces such
as "poverty, discrimination, stressful jobs, marketing-driven global food
companies, substandard housing, dangerous neighborhoods and so on" actually
cause individuals to become ill, according to the studies cited in the
article. Nancy Krieger, the epidemiologist featured in the article, has
shown that poverty and other social determinants are as formidable as
hostile microbes or personal habits when it comes to making us sick. This
may seem obvious, but it is a revolutionary idea: the public generally
believes that poor lifestyle choices, faulty genes, infectious agents, and
poisons are the major factors that give rise to illness.
Krieger is one of
many prominent researchers making connections between health and inequality.
Michael Marmot recently explained in his book, The Status Syndrome, that the
experience of inequality impacts health, making the perception of our place
in the social hierarchy an important factor. According to Harvard's Ichiro
Kawachi, the distribution of wealth in the United States has become an
"important public health problem." The claims of Kawachi and his colleagues
move public health firmly into the political arena, where some people don't
think it belongs. But the links between socio-economic status and health are
so compelling that public health researchers are beginning to suggest
economic and political remedies.
Richard Wilkinson,
an epidemiologist at the University of Nottingham, points out that we are
not fated to live in stressful dominance hierarchies that make us sick - we
can choose to create more egalitarian societies. In his book, The Impact of
Inequality, Wilkinson suggests that employee ownership may provide a path
toward greater equality and consequently better health. The University of
Washington's Stephen Bezruchka, another leading researcher on status and
health, also reminds us that we can choose. He encourages us to participate
in our democracy to effect change. In a 2003 lecture he said that "working
together and organizing is our hope."
It is always true
that we have choices, but some conditions embolden us to create the future
while others invite powerlessness. When it comes to health care these days,
Americans are reluctant to act because we are full of fear. We are afraid:
afraid because we have no health care insurance, afraid of losing our health
care insurance if we have it, or afraid that the insurance we have will not
cover our health care expenses. But in the shadow of those fears is an even
greater fear - the fear of poverty - which can either cause or be caused by
illness.
In the United
States we have all the resources we need to create a new picture: an
abundance of talent, ideas, intelligence, and material wealth. We can decide
to create a society that not only includes guaranteed health care but also
replaces our crushing climate of fear with a creative culture of care. As
Wilkinson and Bezruchka suggest, we can choose to work for better health by
working for greater equality.

Brydie Ragan is an
indefatigable advocate for guaranteed health care. She travels nationwide to
present "Share the Health," a program that inspires Americans to envision
health care for everyone.