Good health is vital for prosperity, allowing people to play an active role at work and in their communities. Improvements in life expectancy stalled in the decade before the pandemic and there are wide inequalities in health within and between local areas in the UK.
50% of people in the most deprived areas report poor health by age 55 - 59, over two decades earlier than those in the least deprived areas.
Women in the least deprived areas in England live a further 19.7 years in good health than those in the most deprived. For men, it's 18.4 years.
A woman born in Wokingham can expect to live 15 more years in good health than a woman born in Blackpool. A man born in Richmond upon Thames can expect to live 17 more years in good health than a man born in Belfast.
This stark inequality is played out in communities around the country, showing that the circumstances in which we live (the wider determinants of health) shape our health. The pandemic has highlighted these inequalities, with people from the poorest areas suffering disproportionately from COVID-19.
In the decade prior to the pandemic life expectancy improvements had stalled, health inequalities were large and growing – between different parts of the UK, and between the most and least deprived areas.
However, these inequalities are not inevitable. Addressing a deep-rooted, society-wide trend of this nature requires action by communities, business and government. This should be accompanied by a whole government strategy to improve health and health equity, with a focus on the wider factors – beyond health care and social care – that influence our health.
Source: The Health Foundation
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