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Wider determinants of health: 1' Commodities and health

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Title: Wider determinants of health: 1' Commodities and health


1
Wider determinants of health1. Commodities and
health
  • MSt in Public Health, 2005 cohort
  • John Powles

2
Wider determinants of health
Disease injury
Loss of health
3
Wider determinants of health
Proximal determinants
  • Eg
  • Infection
  • metabolic disturbance
  • Energy transfer

Disease injury
Loss of health
4
Wider determinants of health
Intermediatedeterminants
Proximal determinants
  • Eg
  • Exposure to infection
  • Diet
  • Careless driving
  • Eg
  • Infection
  • metabolic disturbance
  • Energy transfer

Disease injury
Loss of health
5
Wider determinants of health
Widerdeterminants
Intermediatedeterminants
??? (no agreed conceptual-isation)
Proximal determinants
  • Eg
  • Exposure to infection
  • Diet
  • Careless driving
  • Eg
  • Infection
  • metabolic disturbance
  • Energy transfer

Disease injury
Loss of health
6
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7
Wider determinants mostly used in relation to
  • Social determinants of health inequalities
  • However
  • Contemporary assessments of social influences
    may not throw much light on underlying
    determinants of long term health transitions in
    populations

8
The wider determinants of health transitions
9
The idea of health transition
  • Demographic transition
  • Epidemiologic transition
  • Health transition

10
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11
The idea of the health transition
  • The transition from health levels typical of
    premodern (late agrarian) societies to those of
    late modern societies
  • with some emphasis on the social and
    institutional determinants of the transition eg
    changes in status of women

12
but why take agrarian societies as the baseline?
  • Earlier transition from hunting and gathering to
    agriculture is also likely to have had profound
    health effects
  • better health transitions

13
How should the wider determinants of health
transitions to be conceptualised?
  • Proposed classification
  • Commodities (material life)
  • Institutions (social life)
  • Knowledge (intellectual life)

14
In reality these are meshed together
  • Eg Increase of knowledge
  • Changed world views
  • Institutional change
  • Economic development
  • and can only be separated by thought
    experiments

15
Why bother?
  • To test the plausibility of competing claims
    for the primacy of
  • Material conditions of life, versus
  • Social organisation, versus
  • Knowledge
  • as determinants of long-term health trends

16
Does one cog drive the others?
Non-medical
Medical
Commodities
Institutions
Health
Knowledge
17
Part 1 Commodities and health transitions
  • The strong materialist interpretation
  • Thomas McKeown
  • Robert Fogel

18
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19
Fogel Escape from hunger
20
Four survival patterns and transitions between
them
The health transition in the Third World
The firsthealth transition
21
Four survival patterns and transitions between
them
22
How do we know about mortality and fertility
levels in the past?
  • Official systems for vital registration
  • In the UK from 1837
  • Family reconstitution from parish records
  • In England from the 16th century
  • Survival analysis using household registers
  • Sweden/Belgium/Italy/Japan/NE China for late
    C18/C19

23
What is family reconstitution?
  • In eg early modern England, vital events were
    recorded by the established Church (baptisms,
    burials, marriages)
  • Starting eg with a record of a baptism
  • Back to marriage and baptism of parents
  • Forward to death of subject, and so
  • Reconstitute families and then estimate vital
    rates

24
What are household registers?
  • Updated records of who is living in each
    household
  • Can use standard epidemiological techniques to
    estimate survival
  • Associations with other characteristics can be
    explored
  • Eg indices of social rank

25
Comparing survival patterns
  • Summary measure
  • Life expectancy at birth
  • Mean of all life durations
  • Or Mean age at death (in a life table
    population)
  • But
  • Mean does not convey distribution (ie survival
    patterns) well when many lives are very short

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28
So when considering transitions across a wide
range of survival (e0) levels
  • It is more informative to consider separately,
  • changes in
  • Survival chances in childhood
  • And
  • Survival chances in adulthood
  • Additionally because
  • these have varied independently through time

29
Mortality patterns are closely linked to
fertility patterns
  • In the long run death rate birth rate
  • Except in stationary populations
  • The distribution of deaths by age at death, and
  • The age structure of the population
  • Are much more sensitive to the recent history
    of the birth rate than to the recent history of
    the death rate
  • Population aging has been much more
    powerfully influenced by the decline in fertility
    than the decline in mortality

30
Summary measures of child survival
  • Infant mortality rates
  • Conceptually
  • probability of death by age 1
  • Operationally measured as
  • Drawback
  • Direct estimation requires vital statistical
    system ie not very practical in high mortality
    populations

31
Under 5 mortality rates
  • Conceptually
  • probability of death before 5
  • Operational estimation
  • Indirect from survey Qs to women about
  • Number of children born
  • Number who have died?
  • (Brass technique)
  • Main measure now used for low and middle income
    countries
  • (IMR estimates also derived this way, but less
    robustly)

32
For an intuitive summary of population experience
  • May use
  • chance of surviving to (or dying before)
    adulthood (taken as 15)
  • Even at e0 35
  • corresponds closely to U5MR
  • 93 of those surviving to 5 survive to 15
  • At e0 75
  • 99.8 of those surviving to 5 survive to 15

33
Summary measures of adult survival
  • Adult mortality rate
  • probability of dying before 60
  • Given survival to 15
  • Most widely used measure eg by World Bank
  • But 60 is rather low for low mortality countries
    (especially when you are my age!)
  • I use probability of surviving/dying between 15
    and 65
  • (difference will be small)

34
Life expectancy in England since the C17
35
Sweden life expectancy since the mid C18
36
Changing survival chances England C17 to late
C18 - childhood
37
Changing survival chances England C17 to late
C18 - adulthood
38
Changing survival chances England since the late
C18
39
Changing survival chances England since the C17
NB In early modern times, 70 of those alive at
15 died before 65. The idea that that high
mortality was concentrated in childhood is
misleading.
40
  • Risks of death per year lived were higher at
    the beginning of life
  • But cumulative risks of dying over the 15
    years of childhood were much lower than the
    cumulative risks of dying over the next 45 years
    (to age 60)

41
Life expectancy in England since the C17
42
Fogel techno-physio-revolution
  • Hunger was not abolished in the West til the C20
  • Before then life was constrained by sub-optimal
    nutrition
  • Adjustments included small body size

43
  • Economic development
  • Increased personal incomes
  • Increased command over food
  • Better nutrition
  • Better health
  • (especially because of increased resistance
    against infection)
  • Advanced by Thomas McKeown
  • Recently elaborated by Robert Fogel

44
We are much taller than our ancestors
45
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46
and very much heavier
  • 50kg -gt 75kg for males

47
Net nutrition and survival in adults
  • Height summarises net nutrition in childhood
  • Weight for height summarises recent adequacy (or
    excess) of dietary energy (relative to
    expenditure)

48
Waaler surface Relationship between height,
weight and risk of death based on follow-up of
309000 Norwegian males
49
Waaler surface Relationship between height,
weight and risk of death based on follow-up of
309000 Norwegian males
50
Waaler surface Relationship between height,
weight and risk of death based on follow-up of
309000 Norwegian males
51
  • The available data suggest that the average
    efficiency of the human engine in Britain
    increased by about 53 percent between 1790 and
    1980. The combined effect of the increase in
    dietary energy available for work, and of the
    increased human efficiency in transforming
    dietary energy into work output, appears to
    account for about 50 percent of the British
    economic growth since 1790
  • Fogel, 2004

52
Four survival patterns and transitions between
them
The health transition in the Third World
53
The health transition in the Third World
  • Sources for early phase
  • India censuses from 1881
  • Japan/China household registers from later C18

54
Picture of India
55
Differences with West
  • Timing C20, mainly second half
  • Implication Bigger stock of knowledge available
  • Starting point higher mortality/fertility
  • levels (in some populations)
  • Speed Mortality decline much faster

56
India the demographic transition since late C19
57
India the demographic transition since late C19,
with projections to 2050
58
Life expectancy in India since the 1880s
estimates are for decades and do not show short
term deviations
59
Episodes of catastrophic mortality in India since
the C18
60
Life expectancy in India since the 1880s
1940s
estimates to the 1950s are for decades and do
not show short term deviations
61
History of mortality decline in India
  • C19 to WWII
  • Immediate post WWII

62
How is life expectancy calculated from census
returns?
  • Those aged x at a decennial census are the
    survivors of those aged x-10 at the previous
    census
  • But
  • Survivorship in the first decade still needs
    to be reliably estimated
  • Problems of data quality especially
    mis-statement of ages

63
Survival trends in childhood, India late C19 to
1940s
64
Survival trends in adulthood, India late C19 to
1940s
NB 5 out of 6 15yr olds died before reaching
65 Mortality risks were NOT concentrated in
childhood.
65
Survival trends in childhood, India since late C19
66
Survival trends in adulthood, India since late C19
67
Why was pre-transition mortality so much more
severe in eg India?
  • Except in what are necessarily periods of
    transition, the death rate approximates the birth
    rate.
  • This allows 2 main possibilities in pre-modern
    societies
  • very high mortality in balance with very high
    fertility
  • 'sub-maximal' mortality in balance with
    sub-maximal fertility

68
Why was pre-transition mortality so much more
severe in eg India?
  • In Europe north and west of a line joining St
    Petersburg and Trieste the 'European marriage
    pattern' moderated fertility and thereby allowed
    moderated mortality

69
Fertility levels in (some) poor agrarian societies
  • The combination of universal early marriage and
    a sedentary / agrarian mode of life was
    associated with subtantially higher fertility
    than observed in
  • Undisrupted hunter-gatherer societies
  • Free-living great apes
  • Demographers refer to it as natural fertility
    but this is clearly a misnomer

70
in Chinese extended households (effective)
fertility was also controlled
  • partly by (mainly female) infanticide

71
Infant weight and survival, India, 1970s
72
Relative risk of dying in the next 6 months by
of the Harvard weight for age norm
Indian infants aged 1 to 36 months
73
Field studies of poor agrarian populations with
high burdens of infection
74
1978
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78
  • 3 boys born Feb 64 at 10 years of age
  • Similar height to 7 year olds in US

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83
Conclusion of Narangwal Study, Punjab, India,
1968-72
  • ' If the infection-malnutrition-infection
    sequence moves rapidly, the child dies - although
    neither malnutrition nor infections by themselves
    would have caused death.'

84
Ie. Net nutritional status is a critical
determinant of survival, but
  • It depends not only on
  • Food consumed
  • But also on
  • Burden of infection
  • and this is subject to social (institutional)
    influences
  • Eg literacy of the mother
  • cleanliness

85
Four survival patterns and transitions between
them
The firsthealth transition
86
Evidence on survival (and fertility) in
hunter-gatherers
  • Best for
  • Ache of Paraguay
  • !Kung (or San) of the Kalahari

87
  • e0 similar to early modern N-W Europe
  • Fertility moderate
  • 4-5 year birth spacing
  • TFR 4-5

88
This contrast throws light on sources of NCDs
under the material conditions of late modernity
The firsthealth transition
89
Greater command over commodities is not uniformly
favourable to health
  • Tobacco
  • Alcohol
  • Saturated fat
  • Sugar
  • Salt
  • Reduced need to expend energy
  • (Deferred (and reduced) childbearing)

90
These actual or potential harms from affluence
also need to be contained
91
Does one cog drive the others?
Non-medical
Medical
Commodities
Institutions
Health
Knowledge
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