Abstract
Theresa Marteau and colleagues argue that behavioural and social causes of poor health must be tackled in parallel to reduce inequalities
Life expectancy in England is stalling, while at the same time health inequalities are widening. The 2020 Marmot review of health inequalities in England showed that between 2010 and 2018 the gap in life expectancy at birth between those living in the least and most deprived areas increased.1 For men the gap increased from 9.1 to 9.5 years and for women from 6.8 to 7.7 years.
The time people spend in poor health has also increased across England since 2010, from 15.8 to 16.2 years for men, and 18.7 to 19.4 years for women. But these average figures mask an even steeper social gradient than that seen for life expectancy, meaning that those in more deprived areas spend a larger proportion of their already shorter lives in poor health.
The covid-19 pandemic is set to widen these inequalities yet further.2 For example, the age standardised mortality rate associated with covid-19 in the most deprived areas in July 2020 was 3.1 deaths/100 000 population, more than double the rate in the least deprived areas (1.4 deaths/100 000 population).3
Both the 2010 and 2020 Marmot reviews1 4 outline actions in five priority areas for health equity: giving every child the best start in life; good education and lifelong learning to maximise capabilities; fair employment and good working conditions; healthy standard of living for all; and healthy and sustainable places and environments in which to live. However, the 2010 Marmot review included a sixth area—strengthening prevention of ill health—that was omitted from the 2020 review on the basis that it had received more policy focus over the past decade than the other areas. Preventing ill health requires a focus on the behaviours that follow the social gradient and contribute most to chronic disease, including smoking and unhealthy diets. How effective have the policies over the past decade been and how can we do better?
Policies focusing on behavioural causes
In England, the four leading behavioural causes of years of life lost are tobacco use, unhealthy diet, alcohol consumption, and physical inactivity.5 Importantly, all of these behaviours are socioeconomically patterned. Changing them therefore has the potential to increase not only life expectancy but healthy life expectancy, which has a 19 year gap between rich and poor.6 Yet despite England announcing some policies on these behaviours in England over the past decade, there has been little effective action.
Most of the relevant policies have centred on childhood obesity. At national level this includes the publication of the childhood obesity plan in 2016 followed by two further chapters in 2018 and 2019. These documents proposed important population level measures, including several that target commercial determinants of health such as advertising and marketing. A soft drinks industry levy was introduced in 2018, and is showing promising effects in both driving reformulation and reducing sales of sugary drinks.7 But the other major measures proposed have yet to move beyond the consultation stage. The outgoing chief medical officer for England stated in 2019 that we are “nowhere near achieving” the government ambition to halve childhood obesity by 2030.”8
Policy activity across the three other behavioural causes has been uneven, with some strong action on tobacco control but little on alcohol and physical activity. The 2012 ban on tobacco displays at point of sale was followed by the introduction of standardised packaging in 2016, and the introduction of a minimum excise tax in 2017. The last measure in particular would be predicted to reduce inequalities in smoking, as price based interventions most consistently lead to greater declines in smoking among adults and young people in lower socioeconomic positions than higher.9 10 But although the prevalence of smoking in England has fallen over the past decade, the gap in smoking between those in routine and manual occupations compared with those in other occupations has widened substantially.11 Smoking remains the single largest behavioural contributor to the gap in life expectancy between poor and rich people.12
English governments have introduced no new policies in the past decade on alcohol control. Minimum unit price, which early findings in Scotland suggest has potential to reduce the social gradient in alcohol harm,13 was eschewed in England in 2013. Since then government policies have served to increase rather than decrease the affordability of alcohol, with no notable cuts or freezes in alcohol duty, including in the most recent budget.14
The four UK chief medical officers published an update in 2019 of their 2011 guidelines for physical activity,15 but no formal policies have been introduced at national level.
What would effective policy comprise?
Changing behaviours equitably requires multiple interventions in multiple systems. Policy makers need to work at local, national, and international levels, engaging with the communities they serve. Interventions should include approaches that target high risk individuals as well as those aimed at whole populations. For example, smoking cessation and weight management services can support behaviour change for smokers and people who are overweight, while tobacco taxation and food advertising restrictions influence the behaviours of entire populations.
Two complementary types of interventions can change behaviour: those that target conscious processes and those that target non-conscious processes. Providing personalised risk profiles, for example, requires conscious effort to influence smoking and eating behaviour.16 By contrast, changing the context or choice architecture within which a behaviour occurs—for example, by increasing the proportion of healthier foods offered,17 requires less conscious effort by an individual to make healthier decisions.
Conscious processes generally make higher demands on people’s cognitive, social, and material resources. These resources are not evenly distributed across society, so interventions that rely on them can widen health inequalities.18 19 Such effects are known as intervention generated inequalities. Unfortunately, interventions that rely on conscious processes have dominated policy responses to health inequalities in England since the 1970s.20
Interventions with most promise for both improving population health and reducing the gap between the poorest and the richest are those aimed at whole populations using interventions that largely target non-conscious processes. They include fiscal and economic interventions, marketing approaches, and interventions altering the availability of products that harm health.21 22 23
Tackling behavioural and social causes in parallel
The behavioural causes of health inequalities—tobacco use, unhealthy diet, alcohol consumption, and physical inactivity 5—share several drivers with the social causes. These include factors such as unequal distribution of income, goods and services, education, employment, and power,24 and, importantly, poverty—with its attentional, emotional, and material consequences.
Intervening on the social determinants can therefore also have a positive effect on the behavioural determinants. For example, increasing household incomes in the poorest households can increase spending on fruit and vegetables25 and reduce spending on tobacco and alcohol,25 26 27 perhaps by reducing stress in these households.26 27
But such effects, while welcome, are insufficient on their own to change behaviours at the scale needed to reduce the health inequalities. It is also necessary to tackle the drivers of the behavioural causes that are not shared with the social causes.
One set of drivers that shapes much of the routine, habitual, and impulsive behaviour contributing to health inequalities is the stimuli or cues that surround us in physical, economic, digital, social, and commercial environments. Cues that encourage unhealthy behaviours such as the presence of tobacco, alcohol, and fast food outlets are generally much more prevalent in areas of high deprivation.28
Higher densities of tobacco retailers are associated with higher levels of smoking,29 including smoking in pregnancy,30 31 and lower quit attempts.30 Equivalent patterns are seen for densities of fast food outlets and the prevalence of obesity in both adults and children,32 33 and for alcohol retailers and alcohol consumption and harm.34 Conversely, cues for healthier behaviour such as physical activity include green spaces, which are twice as likely to be found in towns that are least deprived as in those that are most deprived.35 Green spaces are associated with higher self-reported health and mental wellbeing,36 37 both outcomes that are lower in more deprived groups.
Removing or reducing the environmental drivers of unhealthy behaviours and replacing them with drivers for healthier behaviours would have beneficial effects across populations, with the largest effects in the areas of highest deprivation. For example, reducing volume and speed of traffic and providing segregated infrastructure such as cycle lanes are associated with increased physical activity through cycling.38 Reducing the size of wine glasses and wine bottles reduces alcohol consumption.39 40
Other important environmental drivers of behaviour include price and marketing, for which effective interventions include taxes and regulation.21 22 23 The strongest evidence for the largest improvements in population health and reductions in inequalities is for interventions that reduce the affordability of tobacco and alcohol.23 Similar effects seem likely for interventions that reduce the affordability of foods high in fat, sugar, or salt.7 41 Price based interventions with the most promise to increase physical activity are those that increase the affordability of walking, cycling, and public transport, and disincentivise driving.42
Price based interventions tend to have larger effects on people with low incomes—that is, those most likely to experience the harms that result from unhealthy products and practices.43 Effective marketing interventions include bans or restrictions on advertising and marketing designed to persuade people to consume health damaging products. Reducing exposure of children and adults to alcohol and unhealthy food marketing reduces their consumption of these products,44 45 and anti-tobacco campaigns reduce smoking prevalence and increase quitting rates.46
Achieving effective policy action requires strong political and public support to overcome powerful lobbying from commercial organisations that profit at the expense of population health.47 48 Tackling behavioural and social causes together is particularly important for price based interventions. Incomes in the poorest families in the UK fell during the financial crisis of 2008-09, leaving them no higher in 2018-19 than in 2001-02.49 But introducing price based interventions without steps to alleviate poverty will rightly lack public support. Calls to address the inequalities revealed and worsened by the covid-19 pandemic50 51 52 have the potential to raise support for effective action.
Conclusion
The large and growing health inequalities in England described in the Marmot 2020 review can be both stalled and reversed. Although greater policy focus has been given to behavioural causes than social causes of inequalities over the past decade, this focus has not been matched by effective action at the scale needed. Given behavioural and social causes share some but not all drivers, effectively tackling health inequalities requires addressing both behavioural and social causes, in parallel and at a scale commensurate with this huge and growing problem. Tackling health inequalities should now form the core of all policies to build resilient societies post covid-19.
Key messages.
The 2020 Marmot review showed that health inequalities in England have widened since 2010
Prevention of ill health was omitted from the 2020 review on the basis that it had received greater policy focus than social causes
This policy focus was, however, unmatched by effective action
Behavioural causes of ill health and inequality—tobacco use, unhealthy diet, alcohol consumption, and physical inactivity—share only some drivers with the social causes
Effectively tackling health inequalities requires addressing both behavioural and social causes in parallel
Contributors and sources: TMM conceived the idea for this paper following discussions with HR and MM. TMM and HR prepared the first draft of the paper to which MM added conceptual ideas and salient evidence. All authors edited the manuscript before approving the final version. TMM is guarantor of the article.
Competing interests: We have read and understood BMJ policy on declaration of interests and have no relevant interests to declare.
Provenance and peer review: Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
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