"They pulled that funding away and we're not recovering. it's getting worse": deaths of despair in post-austerity north east England.

IF 4.5 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Timothy Price
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Abstract

Background: Deaths related to suicide, drug misuse, and alcohol-specific causes, known collectively as "deaths of despair" are of growing interest to researchers in England. Rates of death from these causes are highest in deprived northern communities and are closely tied to the social determinants of health and the policy decisions that have shaped them. The aim of this paper is to explore how stakeholders and community members living in Middlesbrough and South Tyneside, two Northern towns with above average rates of deaths of despair, understood the relationship between austerity policies and rates of deaths from these causes in their areas.

Methods: I conducted interviews and one focus group with a total of 54 stakeholders and community members in Middlesbrough and South Tyneside. Data were analysed using the iterative categorisation technique and the findings were interpreted through thematic analysis.

Results: The findings highlight four primary ways through which austerity exacerbated rates of deaths of despair in Middlesbrough and South Tyneside: reduced access to mental health services, diminished substance abuse treatment capacity, loss of youth services, and the closure of community institutions. Participants linked these cuts to rising social isolation, declining mental health, and increased substance misuse, which collectively deepened geographic inequalities in deaths of despair.

Conclusions: This study underscores the urgent need for reinvestment in local services to reduce inequalities and prevent further unnecessary deaths due to drug, suicide, and alcohol-specific causes. Prioritising the restoration and enhancement of services lost to austerity is critical. Such reinvestment will not only help to alleviate some of the most immediate need but also form a foundation for addressing the wider structural inequalities that perpetuate deaths of despair.

"他们撤走了资金,我们却没有恢复。情况越来越糟":紧缩后英格兰东北部的绝望死亡。
背景:与自杀、滥用药物和酗酒有关的死亡,统称为 "绝望死亡",越来越受到英格兰研究人员的关注。这些原因造成的死亡率在北部贫困社区最高,并与健康的社会决定因素和形成这些因素的政策决定密切相关。本文旨在探讨居住在米德尔斯堡(Middlesbrough)和南泰恩赛德(South Tyneside)的利益相关者和社区成员是如何理解紧缩政策与其所在地区因这些原因导致的死亡率之间的关系的:我对米德尔斯堡和南泰恩赛德的 54 名利益相关者和社区成员进行了访谈,并组织了一个焦点小组。采用迭代分类技术对数据进行了分析,并通过主题分析对结果进行了解释:研究结果强调了紧缩政策加剧米德尔斯堡和南泰恩赛德绝望死亡率的四种主要方式:获得心理健康服务的机会减少、药物滥用治疗能力下降、青少年服务丧失以及社区机构关闭。参与者将这些削减与日益严重的社会隔离、心理健康下降和药物滥用增加联系在一起,共同加深了绝望死亡的地域不平等:这项研究强调,迫切需要对当地服务进行再投资,以减少不平等现象,防止因毒品、自杀和酗酒等特定原因造成更多不必要的死亡。优先恢复和加强因财政紧缩而失去的服务至关重要。这种再投资不仅有助于缓解一些最迫切的需求,而且也为解决造成绝望死亡的更广泛的结构性不平等奠定了基础。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
4.20%
发文量
162
审稿时长
28 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal for Equity in Health is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal presenting evidence relevant to the search for, and attainment of, equity in health across and within countries. International Journal for Equity in Health aims to improve the understanding of issues that influence the health of populations. This includes the discussion of political, policy-related, economic, social and health services-related influences, particularly with regard to systematic differences in distributions of one or more aspects of health in population groups defined demographically, geographically, or socially.
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