Deprivation and self-reported health: are there 'Scottish effects' in England and Wales?
- PMID: 18946154
- DOI: 10.1093/pubmed/fdn089
Deprivation and self-reported health: are there 'Scottish effects' in England and Wales?
Abstract
Background: Although the association between poor health and deprivation is well-founded, a 'Scottish effect' has been observed, whereby the level of health appears even poorer than Scotland's higher level of deprivation should warrant. We consider whether 'Scottish effects' also occur within the regions of England and Wales.
Method: Using ward-level data from the national census, we regress healthy life expectancies relative to total life expectancies on Carstairs deprivation scores, households' average disposable incomes, geo-spatial characteristics and regional dummy variables.
Results: Higher incomes and lower Carstairs scores are each associated with longer proportions of lives expected to be spent in good health or without long-standing illness. Relative to the London region, the coefficients on the regional dummies are uniformly negative and mostly significant.
Conclusions: There exist differences in relative health expectancies between the regions of England and Wales, which are not fully explained by the differences in socio-economic circumstances. Conventional deprivation measures tend to understate the poorer health performances of the more deprived regions (Wales and the north of England), and the understatement increases with deprivation. The exception to the rule is London, where health expectancies are superior to those which deprivation leads us to expect.
Comment on
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Why is mortality higher in Scotland than in England and Wales? Decreasing influence of socioeconomic deprivation between 1981 and 2001 supports the existence of a 'Scottish Effect'.J Public Health (Oxf). 2005 Jun;27(2):199-204. doi: 10.1093/pubmed/fdi002. Epub 2005 Mar 17. J Public Health (Oxf). 2005. PMID: 15774571
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