Wilkinson and Pickett [1] address associations between income
inequality and overall population health and between income inequality and
health disparities and discuss whether underlying processes are similar
with respect to both associations. They conclude that, while narrower
income differences are associated with better overall health, the
narrowing of income differences may do little to reduce health disparities
because narrower income differences are associated with improved health of
both the wealthy and the poor.
Without any examination of data, there is reason to expect narrower
income differences to be associated with better overall health at least
because of the diminishing marginal utility of the disproportionate
resources of the wealthy in areas with high income inequality and possibly
also (as Wilkinson has argued in a number of places) because the greater
social cohesion in a more egalitarian society may improve the health of
both advantaged and disadvantaged groups. There are even more obvious
reasons to expect narrower income differences to be associated with
smaller health disparities. But the study of these issues is complex.
The study of the size of health disparities in different settings is
particularly complicated by the fact that the standard measures of
differences between rates at which advantaged and disadvantaged groups
experience or avoid some outcome tend to be systematically associated with
the overall prevalence of the outcome. Most notably, the less common an
outcome, the greater tends to be the relative difference between rates of
experiencing it and the smaller tends to be the relative difference
between rates of failing to experience it.[2-5] Wilkinson and Pickett,
however, rely on gradients in mortality rates (a function of relative
differences in such rates) as their principal indicator of the size of
health disparities, without any recognition of the extent to which lower
mortality will tend to be associated with steeper gradients (larger
relative differences) in mortality rates or less steep gradients in
survival rates.
Wilkinson and Pickett also touch briefly on the distinction between
relative and absolute differences. They do so somewhat confusingly,
however, by observing that [i]f ill health is reduced in all income
groups but is more reduced in poor that in wealthy groups, absolute
differences will be smaller
[but]
relative differences
may be
undiminished. Typically, researchers use a phrase like more reduced to
mean a greater relative reduction rather than, as Wilkinson and Pickett
apparently mean, a greater absolute reduction. In any case, however,
consideration of absolute differences does not further the discussion here
since absolute differences tend also to be correlated with the overall
prevalence of an outcome (usually in a way that is the inverse of the
correlation of the relative difference in rare outcomes like mortality,[2-
5] though in a more complicated way with regard to relative differences in
commoner outcomes [3-8]).
As Wilkinson has done previously,[9,10] Wilkinson and Pickett note
findings that comparatively egalitarian (and healthy) societies like
Sweden do not have smaller mortality differentials than less egalitarian
societies.[11,12] But the principal authors of such studies, which found
Sweden and Norway to have shown larger than average relative differences in
mortality rates between advantaged and disadvantaged groups, have
themselves recently recognized that there tends to be a systematic
relationship between low levels of an outcome and high relative
differences in rates of experiencing the outcome.[13] Thus, those authors
have essentially called into question the meaning of the comparatively
larger relative differences in mortality in Sweden or other countries with
low overall mortality that received attention in their earlier
studies.[14]
In an ironic way, Wilkinson and Pickett seem correct that narrower income differences may tend to increase health disparities as
the authors measure those disparities. That is, if narrow income
differences are associated with better overall health, in places with
narrow income differences, overall mortality rates will tend to be low,
with a corresponding tendency for relative differences in mortality rates
to be large (though relative differences in survival rates to be small)
notwithstanding a tendency for narrower income differences also to reduce
health inequality. But determining whether narrower income differences
could in fact cause health disparities to be larger in some meaningful
sense that is, in a way that is not, solely for statistical reasons, a
function of low overall mortality involves a more complicated inquiry.
And it is one that, like all other inquiries into health disparities,
there is little value in undertaking without an understanding of the ways
measures of differences between rates of experiencing or avoiding an
outcome tend to be systematically correlated with the overall prevalence
of the outcome.
References:
1. Wilkinson RG, Pickett KE. Income inequality and socioeconomic
gradients in mortality. Am J Public Health 2008;98:699-704.
2. Scanlan JP. Race and mortality. Society 2000;37(2):19-35
(reprinted in Current 2000 (Feb)):
http://www.jpscanlan.com/images/Race_and_Mortality.pdf
3. Scanlan JP. Can we actually measure health disparities? Chance
2006:19(2):47-51:
http://www.jpscanlan.com/images/Can_We_Actually_Measure_Health_Disparities.pdf
4. Scanlan JP. Measuring health disparities. J Public Health Manag
Pract 2006;12(3):293-296, responding to Keppel KG, Pearcy JN. Measuring
relative disparities in terms of adverse events. J Public Health Manag
Pract 2005;11(6):479483:
http://www.nursingcenter.com/library/JournalArticle.asp?Article_ID=641470
5. Scanlan JP. The Misinterpretation of Health Inequalities in the
United Kingdom, presented at the British Society for Populations Studies
Conference 2006, Southampton, England, Sept. 18-20, 2006:
http://www.jpscanlan.com/images/BSPS_2006_Complete_Paper.pdf
6. Scanlan JP. Can We Actually Measure Health Disparities, presented
at the 7th International Conference on Health Policy Statistics,
Philadelphia, PA, Jan 17-18, 2008: PowerPoint Presentation:
http://www.jpscanlan.com/images/2008_ICHPS.ppt;
Oral Presentation: http://www.jpscanlan.com/images/2008_ICHPS_Oral.pdf
7. Scanlan JP. Measurement Problems in the National Healthcare
Disparities Report, presented at American Public Health Association 135th
Annual Meeting & Exposition, Washington, DC, Nov. 3-7, 2007:
PowerPoint Presentation:
http://www.jpscanlan.com/images/APHA_2007_Presentation.ppt;Oral
Presentation: http://www.jpscanlan.com/images/ORAL_ANNOTATED.pdf;
Addendum (March 11, 2008): http://www.jpscanlan.com/images/Addendum.pdf
8. Scanlan JP. Perceptions of changes in healthcare disparities
among the elderly dependant on choice of measure. Journal Review Feb. 12,
2008 (responding to Escarce JJ, McGuire TG. Changes in racial differences
in use of medical procedures and diagnostic tests among elderly persons:
1986-1997. Am J Public Health 2004;94:1795-1799):
http://www.journalreview.org/view_pubmed_article.php?pmid=15451752&specialty_id=0
9. Wilkinson R. The politics of health. Lancet 2006;368:1229-1230.
10. Scanlan JP. Why we should expect Nordic countries to show large
relative socioeconomic inequalities in mortality. Lancet Oct. 7, 2006
(responding to Wilkinson R. The politics of health. Lancet 2006;368:1229-
1230:
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140673606695019/comments?action=view&totalComments=1
11. Cavelaars AE, Kunst AE, Geurts JJ, et al. Differences in self
reported morbidity by educational level: a comparison of 11 western
European countries. J Epidemiol Community Health 1998;52:219227.
12. Mackenbach JP, Kunst AE, Cavelaars AE, Groenhof F, Geurts JJ.
Socioeconomic inequalities in morbidity and mortality in western Europe.
The EU Working Group on Socioeconomic Inequalities in Health. Lancet
1997;349:16551659.
13. Houweling TAJ, Kunst AE, Huisman M, Mackenbach JP. Using
relative and absolute measures for monitoring health inequalities:
experiences from cross-national analyses on maternal and child health.
International Journal for Equity in Health 2007;6:15:
http://www.equityhealthj.com/content/6/1/15
14. Scanlan JP. Reconsidering a landmark study. Lancet Feb. 25,
2008 (responding to Mackenbach, JP, Kunst, AE, Cavelaars, et al.
Socioeconomic inequalities in morbidity and mortality in western Europe,
Lancet 1997; 349: 1655-59):
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140673696072261/comments?action=view&totalComments=1