Beyond Behaviour: How Health Inequality Theory Can Enhance Our Understanding of the ‘Alcohol-Harm Paradox’
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Drawing on Theories of Health Inequality to Understand the AHP
2.1. The Social Determinants of Health: Current Evidence and Future Directions
2.2. Fundamental Cause Theory: Current Evidence and Future Directions
2.3. The Political Economy of Health: Current Evidence and Future Directions
2.4. The Eco-Social Model: Current Evidence and Future Directions
3. Computer Simulations Can Test the Explanatory Value of Mechanisms Specified in Health Inequality Theory
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Theory | Description |
---|---|
Social Determinants of Health | Contains four sub-theories (culture-behaviour, materialist, psychosocial and lifecourse). The social determinants of health specify the interacting role of factors from the narrowest sphere (e.g., individual biological mechanisms) to the broadest (e.g., the structure of society) [18]. These determinants can be distinguished into upstream factors (e.g., socioeconomic structure of society) and downstream factors, (e.g., individual factors, health policy and healthcare) [19,20]. The structures in society not only impact health directly but also indirectly by creating mechanisms (or SDH), which are then distributed to reflect the socioeconomic stratification of society [21]. |
Fundamental Cause Theory | Central to FCT are resources defined as money, knowledge, power, prestige, and social connections. It is proposed that high SEP groups have increased access to these flexible resources and can employ them to avoid risks, reduce the consequences of disease and uptake available treatment to improve health. Conversely, these resources are not readily available to low SEP groups. FCT opposes individualistic beliefs, emphasising that health cannot be individually controlled and is to some extent the responsibility of the state [22]. |
Political Economy of Health | The political economy account draws on the idea that cultural-behavioural, material, and psychosocial explanations are rooted in structures (e.g., politics, the economy, work, and labour markets) [23,24]. It is the wider macro-economic and political context that determines the distribution of the SDH, population health and inequalities [25,26]. This often occurs through public policy decision making, which is impacted by the corporate and business sector, labour, civil society, and political attitudes (e.g., individualistic versus environmentally or socially focused) [23]. |
Eco-social Model | The eco-social approach developed by Krieger is a multi-level theory which seeks to “develop analysis of current and changing population patterns of health, disease and well-being in relation to each level of biological, ecological and social organization” [27]. Key to this theory is the idea that biology and biological changes are determined by the social environment [10]. For example, alleged racial differences in biology (e.g., kidney function, blood pressure) posited by biomedical research are instead seen as the modifiable and embodied biological result of occupational and residential racial segregation [27]. |
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Boyd, J.; Bambra, C.; Purshouse, R.C.; Holmes, J. Beyond Behaviour: How Health Inequality Theory Can Enhance Our Understanding of the ‘Alcohol-Harm Paradox’. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 6025. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18116025
Boyd J, Bambra C, Purshouse RC, Holmes J. Beyond Behaviour: How Health Inequality Theory Can Enhance Our Understanding of the ‘Alcohol-Harm Paradox’. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(11):6025. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18116025
Chicago/Turabian StyleBoyd, Jennifer, Clare Bambra, Robin C. Purshouse, and John Holmes. 2021. "Beyond Behaviour: How Health Inequality Theory Can Enhance Our Understanding of the ‘Alcohol-Harm Paradox’" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 11: 6025. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18116025
APA StyleBoyd, J., Bambra, C., Purshouse, R. C., & Holmes, J. (2021). Beyond Behaviour: How Health Inequality Theory Can Enhance Our Understanding of the ‘Alcohol-Harm Paradox’. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(11), 6025. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18116025