Politicians and health experts today come together to call on the government to tackle the causes of poor health and make health improvement an objective across all policy areas – including education, leisure, housing and employment.

The essays conclude that addressing the wider determinants of health is critical to ensuring the prosperity and wellbeing of society, as well as easing pressure on the NHS.

The call comes from the Health Foundation and the All-Party Parliamentary Health Group as they publish a series of hard-hitting essays from distinguished experts in health – A Healthier Life for all: the Case for Cross-Government Action.

  • The essays support the view that a more proactive approach to tackling poor health across all policy areas is urgently needed, to help ensure individuals, families and communities can thrive. In particular, the essays identify that: Most of the factors that contribute to a person’s health sit outside the health care system. For example, the association between having a difficult childhood (for example, as a result of deprivation or abuse) and psychosis in later life is about as strong as the link between smoking and some types of lung cancer[i]. The authors call on government to recognise that health is linked to our social environment, not an output of the NHS
  • Poor health has serious economic consequences for the UK. Sir Michael Marmot (2010) estimated that preventable ill health cost the country £50-65bn a year in lost productivity and tax revenues. The authors call on the government to recognise that health contributes to the core infrastructure of a prosperous and sustainable society, and is not something we can only ‘afford’ when the economy is thriving
  • Improving public health will reduce pressure on public services. Preventable ill health is responsible for around 40 per cent of the burden on health services, but only around four per cent of the health budget is spent on prevention. Also, almost a quarter (23 per cent) of Jobseekers Allowance claimants and more than 40 per cent of Incapacity benefits claimants have mental health problems. The authors call on the government to recognise that there is an economic case for investing in prevention

 

Sir Kevin Barron, Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group, said, ‘Preventable health problems are not issues that can be tackled by the Department of Health alone. The continued impact on society posed by smoking and alcohol consumption, obesity and sedentary life styles, poor life experiences and issues linked to the physical environment, housing, poverty and employment, all present policymakers with enormous challenges. These challenges cannot be ignored, but by tackling them politicians and policymakers could bring about game-changing, health, social and economic benefits.’