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Is Inequality Making Us Sick? [View All]

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Omaha Steve Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Mar-08-08 01:57 PM
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Is Inequality Making Us Sick?
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http://www.aflcio.org/mediacenter/speakout/larry_adelman.cfm


By Larry Adelman
Creator and Executive Producer of 'Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making Us Sick?

Real people have problems with their lives as well as with their organs. Those social problems affect their organs. In order to improve public health, we need to improve society.—Sir Michael Marmot, Chair, World Health Organization Commission on the Social Determinants of Health

For all the talk of the growing gap between the rich and the rest of us, one issue has escaped scrutiny. And that’s health. Not health care, but health.

Some 47 million of us have no health care. Inexcusable. But health care, as Canadian health economist Robert Evans points out, is our repair shop, where we take our bodies when they break down. But what’s wearing down our engines and making us sick in the first place? And why is that wear and tear so differentially distributed by race and by class?

That’s where inequality comes into play. We pour billions of dollars into drugs, dietary supplements and new medical technologies, and focus on what we as individuals can do to be healthier. But a growing body of evidence suggests there is much more to our health than bad habits, our meds or unlucky genes.

Written into our bodies is an accumulation of conditions that start in childhood and can lead to a pile-up of risk for some, a cascade of advantage for others. Harvard epidemiologist Nancy Krieger says, “We interact constantly with the world in which we’re engaged. That’s the way in which the biology actually happens. We carry our history in our bodies. How can we not?”

The social, physical and economic environments in which we are born, live and work can actually get under our skin as surely as germs and viruses. Because these conditions are distributed unequally—in the jobs we do, the wealth we enjoy, the schools we attend, the neighborhoods we inhabit, the power we have to manage our lives—so are our patterns of health and disease, particularly stroke, heart disease, asthma, hypertension, diabetes, kidney disease and even some cancers.

FULL story at link.





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