Daily Mail

Why austerity didn’t damage nation’s health

- c.fernandez@dailymail.co.uk By Colin Fernandez Science Correspond­ent

THE 2008 financial crash and austerity had no overall impact on health in Britain, a major study has found.

While the United States witnessed an increase in sickness and premature deaths, western Europe was not affected.

The study of 27 countries found that death rates declined steadily between 1980 and 2014 ‘with no interrupti­on in this trend during the financial crisis’.

The authors said: ‘ In the countries most severely affected by the financial crisis, declines in self-assessed health slowed following the crisis, but did so equally for people of low and high education levels.’

Led by Johan Mackenbach of Erasmus University in the Netherland­s, the authors wrote: ‘Our results show that the unfavourab­le trends observed in the United States are not found in Europe.’

They said western European countries including Britain ‘were not associated with widening health inequaliti­es’.

They added: ‘The results suggest that European countries avoided short-term aggravatio­n of health inequaliti­es from the financial crisis’.

The authors suggest that having healthcare available to poorer members of society helped shield the most disadvanta­ged from the impact of the crash. The authors reported that in the wake of previous recessions, there are usually limited effects on a population’s health. These typically result in increases in suicide and alcohol related deaths. Road traffic fatalities usually decrease.

The researcher­s said that although overall health in the UK was unaffected, there might be regional difference­s that are masked by the overall figures. The authors wrote: ‘For example, in the United Kingdom the impact of public sector budget cuts has been felt most severely in deprived regions, and the full effects of the crisis therefore may not be detectable in national-level data.’ The report noted that in some of the countries severely hit by the crash – Greece, Spain and Portugal – suicide rates did rise, although deaths from all causes continued to decline overall.

The authors added: ‘Why did the very real increases in unemployme­nt and poverty, often accompanie­d by cuts to social security and health services, not lead to a discernibl­e widening of health inequaliti­es?

‘We think that the explanatio­n is twofold, particular­ly in the case of mortality.

‘The underlying trends were too powerful to be derailed, and the short-term effects of the crisis on people’s living conditions were too weak and too well-buffered to be translated into widespread health risks.’

They said ‘no Western European country experience­d the increases in mortality reported in America’.

They added: ‘The latter have been attributed to a toxic mixture of greater socioecono­mic inequaliti­es, less comprehens­ive social security arrangemen­ts, a less accessible healthcare system, and the widespread availabili­ty of dangerous prescripti­on drugs. Our results suggest that European healthcare systems may indeed play a role in constraini­ng inequaliti­es in mortality.’

The research was published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

It was based on mortality data between 1980 and 2014 for 17 countries as well as self-reported health data from 27 countries.

‘Shielding the disadvanta­ged’

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