The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Health gap between the rich and poor is widening, says study

Fears of more pressure being heaped on vulnerable people

- JEMMA CREW

Poor people in Britain have worse health than those born a century ago, research suggests.

The health gap between the least and most well-off in society is widening and may heap increased pressure on care for vulnerable older people in the future, a University College London (UCL) study found.

The author wanted to find out if “baby boomers” born after 1945 rated their health as better or worse than those born in the early 1920s, according to household income.

More than 200,000 working-age people in England, Wales and Scotland were asked if they had a limiting longterm illness and to rate their overall health as part of the General Household Survey for 1979-2011.

The study analysed their responses to create nationally representa­tive three-year “health” snapshots of the generation­s born between 1920-22 and 1968-70.

Overall, self-reported health outcomes remained constant between the two cohorts, with the exception of limiting long-term illness in men, which showed a statistica­lly significan­t downward trend.

But the gaps between the richest and poorest households widened over time, with inequaliti­es in the prevalence of long-term conditions doubling among women and by 1.5 times among men, the study showed.

Around a quarter (26%) of men born in 1920-22, with the lowest household incomes, said they had a limiting illness compared to one in six (16%) in the richest households.

For those born in 1968-70, more than a third (35%) of the men in the poorest households reported a limiting illness, compared to just 11% of those living in the richest households.

Around one in seven women (15%) born in 1920-22 and living in the poorest households said their health was “not good”, compared with 8% in the richest households.

This had risen to around a fifth of women (20%) born in 1968-70 and living in the poorest households, while the proportion claiming their health was “not good” in the richest households remained similar at 9%.

The author, Dr Stephen Jivraj, of UCL’s Research Department of Epidemiolo­gy and Public Health, said: “The results presented here show a widening in health inequaliti­es by income in later-born British birth cohorts, 1920-70.”

The results show a widening in health inequaliti­es by income in later-born British birth cohorts. RESEARCH AUTHOR DR STEPHEN JIVRAJ

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