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Social Determinants: Low income second leading cause of death in Canada

If low income was considered a disease causing death, it would rank second in Canada to cancer, says Dr. James Dunn. 

Toronto (04 Nov. 2013) - The Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU/NUPGE) health care division reported on Dr. James Dunn's recent speech to the Conference Board of Canada's Summit on Health Care Sustainability. Dr. Dunn teaches at McMaster Univeristy focusing specifically on the socioeconomic determinants of health. 

You can find the full story below. 

Dr. James Dunn makes it clear that wealth not only is a key determinant of a person’s health, but it is stratified so that each economic level outperforms the one before it. That means each layer in the economic pyramid has worse health outcomes than the one above it — not just between the bottom 10 per cent and the top 10 per cent.

Therefore when we look at a country’s mortality rate – and Canada’s is among the top – it doesn’t tell the whole story.

Dr. Dunn teaches at McMaster University in Hamilton and is very familiar with where people live in that city based on economic status.

If low income qualified as a disease it would rank 2nd in Canada, Conference Board of Canada health summit told

Speaking this week at the Conference Board of Canada’s Summit on Health Care Sustainability, he says if some of the lower socioeconomic neighborhoods in that city were looked at as a country, the mortality rates would rank 155th in the world.

Put another way, if low income was considered a disease causing death, it would rank second in Canada to cancer.

A key part of that is the relationship of poverty to both housing and homelessness.

Poverty linked to homelessness and housing, and is cheaper to cure than to treat

Dunn says writer Malcolm Gladwell has got it right – homelessness is far cheaper to cure than to treat. Yet as health policy we opt to treat the symptoms rather than address the fundamental challenge of putting a roof over someone’s head and providing support.

For many people the difficulty is paying rents that take too much of a family’s income, leaving not enough for food and other social opportunities.

In Toronto alone there are 200,000 people waiting for affordable housing. That should be a call to action, but Dunn says the federal and provincial governments have been absent on this file since 1993.

This comes at a considerable cost. Not only do many of those in the lower economic neighborhoods become regulars at the hospital emergency rooms, but they also become regular customers of EMS and the justice system.

That is not money well spent.

Social inequality disadvantages children and society as a whole suffers from lack of future opportunity

Social inequality on this scale not only denies kids considerable opportunity in life, but leaves society worse off by denying capable individuals the ability to contribute at a much higher level.

Dunn says by the age of four the average child from a low socioeconomic background has heard 32 million fewer words than children born to professional parents. That makes a big difference in early childhood development.

Canada lags behind other countries in addressing these significant inequalities. The good news is we can learn from those who have gone before us.

Solutions not far away:inclusive, affordable housing, improved public services

Dunn says the solution lies in more inclusionary housing, more affordable housing, wrap-around cross-sectoral care, and more dense urban design that can accommodate better public amenities – including transit.

“Lack of transit is costing us a future,” Dunn told the audience. Many are suffering not only from economic poverty, but extreme time poverty as cities sprawl and congestion creates high levels of stress among commuters.

“Nothing short of a radical transformation is needed,” he says.

More information: 

Social Determinants: Low income second leading cause of death in Canada

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The National Union of Public and General Employees (NUPGE) is one of Canada's largest labour organizations with over 340,000 members. Our mission is to improve the lives of working families and to build a stronger Canada by ensuring our common wealth is used for the common good. NUPGE