Daily Express

Our ‘lost decade’ for health as gains in life expectancy halt

- By Hanna Geissler Health Reporter

LIFE expectancy in England is flatlining as improvemen­ts in health grind to halt, a damning report warns today.

Worsening health inequaliti­es over the past 10 years have led experts to declare a “lost” decade, in which the good progress of the previous century slowed to a crawl.

Professor Sir Michael Marmot said health is declining overall, the North/ South divide is widening and people in more deprived areas are suffering most. His latest report comes 10 years after he was asked by the Government to review health inequaliti­es.

Sir Michael, who heads the UCL Institute of Health Equity in London, said: “From the beginning of the 20th century, England experience­d continuous improvemen­ts in life expectancy, but from 2011 these improvemen­ts slowed dramatical­ly, almost grinding to a halt.

“England has lost a decade. If health has stopped improving, that means society has stopped improving.”

The new report, Health Equity In England: The Marmot Review 10 Years

On, found “the country has been moving in the wrong direction” in almost all areas highlighte­d in 2010.

In the 100 years to 2010, average life expectancy rose by about one year every four years. But between 2010-12 and 2016-18, it rose by only six months among men, from 79.01 to 79.56 years. In women life expectancy rose by four months, from 82.83 to 83.18 years. In the most deprived 10 per cent of neighbourh­oods, female life expectancy actually declined slightly. The gap between rich and poor is widening, the report said. The difference in life expectancy at birth between the least and most deprived areas was 9.5 years for men and 7.7 years for women in 2016-18, rising from 9.1 and 6.8 in 2010-12. Prof Marmot said poor social and economic conditions were largely to blame. He said: “Austerity has taken a significan­t toll on equity and health and it is likely to continue to do so.”

The report estimated that failing to tackle these issues would cost about £82billion a year in lost taxes, higher welfare payments and increased NHS and social care costs.

It called on the Government to reduce child poverty from an average of 20 to 10 per cent, reduce “poor quality, low-paid and insecure” work, make sure the national living wage and benefits give people the minimum needed for a healthy life, and invest more in the most deprived areas.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has repeatedly promised to unite and “level up” Britain. But Dr Jennifer Dixon, chief executive of the Health Foundation, which commission­ed the report, said: “We urgently need a new national health inequaliti­es strategy, backed by investment in the factors that have the most powerful impact on health, such as early years and youth services, housing, education, social security and good quality work.”

Anna Dixon, chief executive of the Centre for Ageing Better, said: “In one of the richest countries in the world, it is shocking and unacceptab­le that inequaliti­es in health are widening.

“Today’s report makes it clear: for the poorest in our society, life is getting shorter.”

Shirley Cramer, chief executive of the Royal Society of Public Health, said: “It is high time we re-evaluate the bottom line for economic policy, and replace growth of GDP with a goal to improve the health and wellbeing of the public.”

IT IS a sad indictment of our country’s public health that life expectancy in England has, in some areas, decreased in the last decade.

Professor Sir Michael Marmot, author of The Marmot Review 10 Years On, has even declared the 2010 decade a “lost”one. For a century prior to this, life expectancy grew by about a year every four years.

What is even more scandalous is that people in prosperous areas can expect to live almost a decade longer than those in deprived areas. Prof Marmot attributes this in large part to the “austerity” brought in by the Coalition government.

While it was necessary to reduce the deficit – and there are other factors in longevity, such as diet – surely it is time for the Government to “level up” this most iniquitous of life chances.

 ??  ?? Life expectancy for both sexes is highest in the capital
Life expectancy for both sexes is highest in the capital
 ??  ?? People in the North East are forecast to live shorter lives
People in the North East are forecast to live shorter lives
 ??  ?? Warning…Professor Sir Michael Marmot
Warning…Professor Sir Michael Marmot

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