Social inequalities undiminished
- PMID: 84138
- DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(79)90073-4
Social inequalities undiminished
Abstract
Traditional differences in death-rates by social class continue in Britain in the 1970s, mostly at lower levels of mortality. The professions do well, unskilled workers and their families particularly badly. Data on health services are scanty, but they suggest that lower-class families, with greater needs, do not make proportionate demands on some services and receive less of others. Continuing socioeconomic inequalities, disparities in child health and education, and current smoking and exercise habits indicate that inequalities in health will persist. Some ways of levelling up are suggested, starting with children: by creating more equal opportunities for the under-5s through education and day care, expanding child benefit and family endowment, concentrating health services on the socially disadvantaged, and setting an upgraded "health education" to the task--with mothers and children and the whole population.
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