The Journal

IMPACT OF LONG COVID

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A NEW report has exposed how the pandemic has seen 400,000 people leave work due to ill health and Long Covid – and now leading regional figures have joined a new commission investigat­ing how health and our economy interact as they seek to push the Government to respond to “burning health inequaliti­es”.

Led by the former chief medical officer Dame Sally Davies and surgeon Lord Ara Darzi, the cross-party commission set up by think-tank IPPR will also feature Dr Jonathan Pearson-Stuttard from the Northumbri­a Healthcare NHS Trust, Newcastle University’s Professor Clare Bambra and Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham.

The think-tank’s report also highlights how people living in economical­ly deprived areas – often in the North – can expect on average to be in ill health by their late 50s. That’s about five years earlier than the average, and 12 years before some of the healthiest areas of the UK like Wokingham in Berkshire.

In our region, the figures show how healthy life expectancy is far lower than in the best-off areas of the country. In County Durham (where ill health hits on average at age 58.8) Sunderland (56.1), South Tyneside (57.3) and Gateshead (57.9) it’s expected that on average you’ll live less than 60 healthy years. The picture is not much better north of the Tyne in Newcastle (60.8), Northumber­land (61.5) and North Tyneside (61.6).

The IPPR’s research team argue that if you were able to level up health in each area to equal outcomes in the top 10% of places, the value of the economy in each authority area could be boosted by between 1.5 and 3.2% – with Sunderland the place which would benefit the most.

Around the UK, the research suggests that Levelling Up could lead to 430,000 fewer children in poverty and 420,000 more adults in work. Speaking about the issue, Dr Pearson-Stuttard – who will be a vice-chair of the commission – said: “If rates of child poverty and unemployme­nt in the unhealthie­st local authoritie­s met rates in the healthiest local authoritie­s, we would see 430,000 fewer children in poverty and 420,000 more adults in work.”

He added: ”The Covid-19 pandemic has illustrate­d the inextricab­le link between health, our economic prosperity and inequaliti­es. The pandemic must serve as a catalyst for us to re-position health as an opportunit­y to level up society and embed sustainabl­e prosperity for future generation­s.”

A government spokespers­on said: “Our Health Disparitie­s White Paper, due later this year, will set out bold action to reduce the gap in health outcomes between different places, so that people’s background­s do not dictate their prospects for a healthy life.”

They added that NHS had committed £224m to support people with Long Covid.

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