社会不平等和感知健康。

Effective health care Pub Date : 1985-01-01
S M Hunt, J McEwen, S P McKenna
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引用次数: 0

摘要

发病率和死亡率指标与低社会经济地位之间的联系已经观察了许多世纪。1980年,英国出版了《黑色报告》,提请注意国民保健服务未能缩小贫富之间在健康状况方面的差距。在整个欧洲、美国和澳大利亚都观察到与社会阶层有关的发病率和死亡率的梯度。然而,关于人们的感觉,而不是他们是如何生病的,以及他们死亡的原因的信息很少。感知需求的措施可以为常规收集的数据提供重要补充,因为它们使人们能够了解答复者的经验状况,从而为规划、提供和评价保健服务提供重要数据。一种可靠有效的感知健康标准——诺丁汉健康概况——被用来对英格兰不同社会阶层的主观健康状况进行邮政调查。结果显示,仅在20-44岁年龄组中,社会阶层之间存在统计学上的显著差异。无论是男性还是女性,他们都经历过睡眠问题、情绪问题和缺乏精力。在所有情况下,社会阶层越低,感知到的痛苦的数量和严重程度就越大。45岁以后,这些差别虽然仍然存在,但不那么明显了,这可能是因为社会经济地位较低群体的死亡率过高,而且期望值随着年龄的增长而降低。有人认为,从事非熟练和半熟练职业的年轻人,当然还有失业者,比他们较富裕的同胞更容易受到伤害,因为社会环境造成的一种心理易感性,以及无法缓解健康不良的影响。一种马克思主义的“贫困”可能会出现,即当代社会的健康状况受到精神和社会贫困的破坏,而不是过去的赤贫和艰苦劳动。本研究的结果表明,卫生保健资源分配的变化对卫生不平等的影响可能很小。相反,补救行动需要采取更激进的形式,通过实行基本的社会、经济和环境改革来实现愿望和增进福祉。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social inequalities and perceived health.

The association between morbidity and mortality indicators and low socio-economic status has been observed for many centuries. In 1980 the publication of the Black Report in Britain drew attention to the failure of the National Health Service to close the gap between rich and poor in relation to health status. The gradients of morbidity and mortality which are linked to social class have been observed throughout Europe, in the U.S.A. and Australia. However, information on how people feel, as opposed to how they become ill, and the cause of their death, is scarce. Measures of perceived need can provide important additions to routinely collected data because they give access to the experiential status of respondents and thus provide vital data on which to base planning, provision and evaluation of health services. A standard reliable and valid measure of perceived health, the Nottingham Health Profile, was used to conduct a postal survey of differential status in subjective health between social classes in England. The results showed statistically significant differences between social classes in the age group 20-44 years only. For both men and women these were in their experience of sleep problems, emotional problems and lack of energy. In all cases the lower the social class the greater the amount and severity of perceived distress. After the age of 45 these differences, although still present, were not so marked, perhaps because of the excess mortality rates in lower socio-economic groups and the lowering of expectations with age. It is suggested that younger people from unskilled and semi-skilled occupations and, of course, the unemployed, are more vulnerable than their better off compatriots because of a kind of psychic susceptibility which is a consequence of social circumstances and the inability to cushion the effects of ill health. A type of Marxian "immiseration' may occur whereby in contemporary society health status is undermined by spiritual and social impoverishment rather than by the gross poverty and grinding labour of the past. The results of this study indicate that changes in the allocation of health care resources may have only a minor influence on inequalities in health. Remedial action would, rather, need to take the more radical form of providing fulfillment for aspirations and enhancing well-being by introducing fundamental social, economic and environmental reforms.

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