A new international study published in The Lancet found that
socioeconomic disparities between the richest and the poorest in 34 countries
widened over the last decade, and have paralleled a growing inequality gap in
health. The study looked at 34 countries in Europe and North America, and
involved nearly 500,000 teens aged 11 to 15 who were surveyed for the World
Health Organization’s Health Behaviour in School-aged Children study.
Socioeconomic status was based on material assets and indicators of wealth like
owning a car, and health was measured by looking at teens’ physical activity,
BMI, psychological symptoms (irritability, nervousness, and difficulty
sleeping), and physical symptoms (stomachaches, headaches, feeling dizzy, and
life satisfaction).
While both improvements and declines in health were seen
over the course of the study, the researchers found that differences between
the richer and poorer became larger. People living in countries with the more
income inequality were less physically active, had higher BMIs, lower life
satisfaction, and more psychological and physical symptoms.
Drank Elgar, a psychiatry professor at McGill University in
Canada, said in a press release. “If health inequalities are now widening in
such abundantly rich countries, particularly during the so-called ‘healthy
years’ of adolescence, then these trends are especially alarming for future
populations. The many health and social problems that relate to income
inequality and the current global trends in rising income inequality all lead
to a grim prediction about future population health. Urgent action is needed to
tackle inequities in health in adolescence," Elgar concluded.
One report from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation in the UK
notes: “The most plausible explanation for income inequality’s apparent effect
on health and social problems is ‘status anxiety.’ This suggests that income
inequality is harmful because it places people in a hierarchy that increases
status competition and causes stress, which leads to poor health and other
negative outcomes.”
The Institute for Policy Studies, found countries that were
more unequal had higher rates of infant mortality deaths and lower life
expectancies. These countries spanned from Japan to Denmark and the U.S. to
Australia.
Food insecurity is prevalent throughout poor neighborhoods,
making it difficult to eat healthy foods like fresh fruits and vegetables, and
whole grains. Kids that grow up poor are
also more likely to be at risk of smoking, binge drinking, substance abuse, and
child abuse — lending to the current study’s reports of mental strife among
teens.
Employer-paid health care benefits have grown at a faster
rate for higher-income groups than lower and middle-class groups, meaning
top-earners pay less out of pocket.
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