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Subject:

Fw: WHO European report links poverty to widening gaps in health

From:

Jane sandall <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

A forum for discussion on midwifery and reproductive health research." <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Wed, 18 Sep 2002 08:50:00 +0100

Content-Type:

text/plain

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----- Original Message -----
From: "Mcdaid,D" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, September 17, 2002 2:11 PM
Subject: WHO European report links poverty to widening gaps in health


Press Release from WHO Europe 17/09/02

The European Health Report 2002 is available freely on-line at

http://www.who.dk/eprise/main/who/progs/ehr/home

David McDaid
LSE Health and Social Care

Press release EURO/15/02 Copenhagen, 17 September 2002
Press release available on-line at
http://www.who.dk/eprise/main/WHO/MediaCentre/PR/2002/20020916_1
The WHO Regional Office for Europe released The European Health Report 2002
at the fifty-second session of the WHO Regional Committee for Europe, which
began yesterday in Copenhagen, Denmark. The report confirms the strong links
between socioeconomic development, health and equity in the WHO European
Region: "The great differences in health status observed across countries
and among groups within countries have highlighted the fact that all major
determinants of health are linked to social and economic factors".

The report analyses a decade of evidence on health in the Region, which
embraces 51 WHO Member States with some 870 million people. While overall
levels of health in the Region are among the highest in the world, the
report describes widening gaps between and within countries.

The report builds on the view that health policies cannot be isolated from
other policy sectors: "One central task in improving health is to reduce
socioeconomic inequalities, thus placing health in the context of human
development". The link between health and employment, income maintenance,
social welfare, housing and education is crucial in all European Member
States.

"Governments need comparative evidence on which to build policy to protect
the health and wellbeing of their people. That is what this report
provides," stated Dr Marc Danzon, WHO Regional Director for Europe,
introducing the report. "Investment in health and an equitable society is an
investment that pays off, for health affects the whole society."

The European health report 2002 describes trends in health and the most
important health problems, lifestyle and environmental determinants of
health, and health care systems. The full report in English, including the
annex of statistical tables comparing all countries in the European Region,
can be found on and ordered from the Regional Office Web site. The French,
German and Russian versions are in press.
Health in Europe

The European health report 2002 shows a clear relationship between life
expectancy and gross domestic product (GDP) per head. The most striking
example is the widening gap in life expectancy between and within high- and
low-income countries. The gap between the highest and lowest life expectancy
is only 2 years in Sweden but as much as 15 in the Russian Federation.

In the last decade, life expectancy has risen in the Region as a whole, but
fallen in most of the newly independent states of the former USSR (NIS). On
average, people in the NIS die 10 years younger than those in western
European countries. Premature mortality has been most marked in middle-aged
men, and men die 11 years younger than women in the NIS. As to expectancy of
years of healthy life, the average is only 56 years in the NIS, in contrast
to 70 years in the western countries. Describing the dramatic decline in
life expectancy in the NIS during the past decade, the report says, "There
is practically no precedent for changes of this magnitude in peacetime".

The data on poverty mirror these figures. In the central and eastern
European countries and the NIS, the share of the population living on less
than US $4 a day exploded from 3.3% in 1988 to 46% at the end of the 1990s.
In western Europe, about 10% of the total population are estimated to live
below the poverty line (income of less than half the median). The poverty
reflected by these statistics, associated both with industrial and
post-industrial societies, directly affects the variations in health
indicators.

The report points out that the single largest determinant of ill health due
to communicable diseases is poverty, whether defined by income, living
conditions or education. Living in poverty is associated with higher rates
of infectious diseases, notably tuberculosis. The incidence of communicable
diseases such as HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis has risen dramatically in the
NIS. The number of new HIV/AIDS cases in the NIS has doubled every year
since 1995, and there is potential for massive outbreaks.
Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in "hot spots" should be addressed as an
international emergency. The great efforts underway to reduce communicable
diseases in countries remain a public health priority.

According to The European health report 2002, noncommunicable diseases
account for about 75% of the burden of ill health and constitute a
"pan-European epidemic". This figure is rising. The report lists
cardiovascular diseases, cancer, neuropsychiatric disorders (including those
due to alcohol use and depression) among the major causes of the disease
burden in the Region.

Mortality from cardiovascular diseases (CVD) is steadily falling in western
European countries; it is now around half the level it was in 1970. The
average CVD mortality in the NIS is almost three times that in western
countries, and the long-term trends are still increasing. Cancer is
responsible for nearly 20% of all deaths. Cancer mortality is falling in the
European Union and NIS but rising in the countries of central and eastern
Europe.

In many countries, more than half the adult population is overweight, with
20-30% of adults categorized as clinically obese. For example, in Finland,
Germany and the United Kingdom, 20% of adults are obese. The European health
report 2002 calls obesity a spreading chronic disease and risk factor. The
major consequences for health include hypertension, diabetes, CVD and
certain types of cancer.

Diabetes affects about 22.5 million adults in the European Region and is
increasing rapidly in most countries. Moreover, it has changed from
affecting mainly older people to also afflicting people in the first half of
their lives.

Mental health problems are increasing significantly. Some European countries
register up to 6% of the population as having serious mental disorders.
Mental ill health accounts for up to 30% of consultations with general
practitioners in Europe.

The European Region has the highest alcohol consumption in the world. One in
four deaths among European men aged 15-29 years is related to alcohol.
Major determinants of health

The European health report 2002 reviews evidence on health determinants
related to lifestyle, stressing the trends in unhealthy behaviour, such as
the use of tobacco and alcohol. Each year, tobacco consumption causes 1.2
million deaths and alcohol use plays a role in the deaths of 55 000
adolescents.

Environmental factors supplement the list of major health risk factors. Some
21 000 deaths per year in Austria, France and Switzerland could be
attributed to air pollution from traffic; this figure is more that twice
that for deaths from traffic accidents in those countries.
Health systems

The European health report 2002 also provides an overview of countries'
health systems, including financing, national insurance strategies, the
cost-effectiveness of service provision, the performance of primary care,
the restructuring and decentralization of hospital services, and
pharmaceutical polices. The report points out that all European countries
are reforming their health care systems to varying degrees.
The differences in the structure and functioning of health systems in
countries make comparative analysis difficult. Nevertheless, some data can
clearly indicate the disparities within the Region. For example, the number
of doctors in western Europe ranges from 5.5 per 1000 population in Italy,
to 1.5 per 1000 in the United Kingdom. Austria, Belgium, France, Germany,
Iceland and Switzerland spend more than US $300 per person on medicines; the
corresponding figure for Azerbaijan, Kyrgyzstan, the Republic of Moldova,
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan is less than US $10.
For more information contact:
Ms Liuba Negru
Press and Media Relations
WHO Regional Office for Europe
Scherfigsvej 8, DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark
Tel.: +45 39 17 13 44; fax: +45 39 17 18 80; e-mail: [log in to unmask]
<mailto:[log in to unmask]>

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