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HEALTH-EQUITY-NETWORK  October 2004

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Subject:

Canadian Book on Social Determinants of Health in 2nd Printing

From:

Dennis Raphael <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

[log in to unmask]

Date:

Tue, 26 Oct 2004 14:49:49 -0400

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (1 lines)

**apologies for cross-postings**



2000 copies of the 1st printing have been sold...



http://www.cspi.org/books/s/socialdeter.htm



Social Determinants of Health: Canadian Perspectives

General editor, Dennis Raphael

Foreword, Hon. Roy J. Romanow



New Book -- Now Available



Uniting top academics and high profile experts from across the country,

this contributed volume is the first of its kind published in Canada. It

summarizes how socio-economic factors affect the health of Canadians,

surveys the current state of eleven social determinants of health across

Canada, and provides an analysis of how these determinants affect

Canadians’ health. In each case, the book explores what policy options

would contribute to better health outcomes, and how to ensure that these

options are pursued.



Eleven critical areas are investigated: Aboriginal status, early life,

education, employment and working conditions, food security, health care

services, housing, income and its distribution, social safety net, social

exclusion, as well as unemployment and employment security. Gender, and how

its meaning is constructed within Canadian society, is another important

social determinant of health. All contributors systematically consider how

it impacts upon and interacts with their specific social determinant of

health to influence health.



Contributors:



Pat Armstrong   Andrew Jackson   Irving Rootman   François Aubry   Muriel

Kearney  Chandrakant P. Shah  Nathalie Auger   Ronald Labonte    Michael

Shapcott   Gina B. Browne     David Langille   Valerie Tarasuk   Toba

Bryant   Richard Lessard   Luc Thériault

Tracey Burns   Lynn McIntyre   Emile Tompa   Robert Choinière   Michael

Polanyi   Diane-Gabrielle  Tremblay   Ann Curry-Stevens    Michael

Rachlis   Louise Tremblay   Janice Foley   Dennis Raphael       Charles

Ungerleider   Martha Friendly   Marie-France Raynault   Yves

Vaillancourt   Grace-Edward Galabuzi   Barbara Ronson



This volume will serve as an important text for students and also a good

solid resource for teachers and researchers. The major strengths of this

book lie in its breadth of social determinants of health. Most academic

works do not focus on such a wide range and if they do, they do not include

much current research information. [The book] definitely presents the

material in an original way as it is based on up-to-date, new research in

the areas.”   Catherine Chiappetta-Swanson, McMaster University



August 2004  1-55130-237-3 pb 400 pp  C$45.95 US$37.95



Distributed by  Georgetown Terminal Warehouses Limited



TO ORDER:  (tel) 1-866-870-2774 (fax) 1-905-873-6170 OR

[log in to unmask]

-----------------------------------------

The personal is political, the social is physical

By JUDY GERSTEL, Toronto Star, July 30, 2004



A new book published today may not be light summer reading for the cottage

or the beach but it does shed a lot of light on the way we live now as

Canadians.



Social Determinants Of Health: Canadian Perspectives, published by Canadian

Scholars' Press (http://www.cspi.org), is rightly billed as the first

volume of its kind published in this country.



Edited by York University professor Dennis Raphael and with a thoughtful

foreward by Roy Romanow, it's a collection of research and observations by

academics and leading-edge thinkers (a whole new community, in a way,

formed

around this issue) about how social determinants of health play out in

Canadian life.



Alas, says Raphael, the way they play out "is certainly not a good news

story."



But then, Raphael is always loud and clear about his agenda: persuading

policy-makers to take action to improve social conditions in Canada and

thereby improve the health of Canadians.



"It's a very political book," he acknowledges. "It's about how governments

and other institutions make decisions on how to allocate resources among

Canadians. So you have someone asking, `Why do only 10 to 15 per cent of

women have access to licensed quality child care in Canada?' And, `Why is

this situation so completely different than it is in northern Europe and

the

Scandinavian countries?'"



Raphael points to the final chapter of the book, with a chart showing that

program spending in Canada has declined "precipitously" since 1992, even as

Paul Martin boasted in the House of Commons while this was happening that

"program spending was at the lowest level of the GDP since the late 1940s."



Concludes Raphael: "It comes down basically to the whole approach to

governance now being different from what it used to be in Canada."



Raphael's book explores each of 11 recognized social determinants that

impact on health and well-being in Canada in the context of what exists "on

the ground" - how theory translates into real life. If a book can walk the

walk as well as talk the talk, this one does. It's a significant resource

for teachers, students and researchers.



But it's also a useful, important and eye-opening reminder for all of us

about how our political and societal choices determine the health -

literally, the extent of illness, disease, disability, medical costs - of

Canadians, from heart disease and cancer to psychological impairment and

chronic neuroskeletal problems.



As Romanow reminds us, the first great revolution in the course of public

health was the control of infectious diseases; the second was the battle

against non-communicable diseases.



"The third great revolution is about moving from an illness model to all of

those things that both prevent illness and promote a holistic sense of

well-being," he writes.



While healthy lifestyle choices and a comprehensive, responsive and

accountable national health care system are important and vital, says

Romanow, he emphasizes that the main factors - "the main `determinants' as

the experts call them - that will likely shape our health and life span are

the ones that affect society as a whole."



Among them: employment security and working conditions, income and its

distribution, housing, early childhood education, literacy, social

inclusion.



Raphael suggests that the "really key" chapter, the "complete eye-opener"

is

Dianne-Gabrielle Tremblay's analysis of the effect of globalization upon

employment security.



She looks at the "new boundaryless careers" - no longer based on a vertical

promotion ladder but instead nomadic with horizontal movement and new forms

of organization and collaboration: team work, networks and virtual

communities.



While this flexibility may be positive for certain sectors, she writes, it

entails "precariousness, lack of stability and the lack of a career for

others" as well as "`false' self-employment, that is those who are

dependent

on one or more order-givers."



The whole concept of "job security" is in doubt, she suggests, and this is

a

major factor in health and well-being. Furthermore, notes Raphael, "This is

especially the case among Canadian women."



And yet, with the publication of this book, Raphael is feeling hopeful.



"If you look at the Liberal Party campaign statement, it has a commitment

to

social programs, early childhood education, housing. This past federal

election was fought along the issues of values and social programs and a

belief about Canadians caring about each other.



"What you have, one might argue, is a recognition that the issues outlined

throughout the book are worthy of attention.



"Of course, the million dollar question is, `To what extent is there going

to be follow through on this?'"



And, one might ask, how healthy will Canadian society, and Canadians,

choose

to be?









































































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