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HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
Expert: Middle-class = middling health
By Alvin Powell
Gazette Staff Citing a host of studies, surveys, and statistics, a British health expert made a compelling case last week that the link between low social status and poor health is not just a problem for the poor, but for people at all levels of society. Michael Marmot, director of the International Centre for Health and Society at University College, London, told about 90 faculty and students at the Harvard School of Public Health (SPH) that a recently completed study shows that the wealthy are not only healthier than the poor, they're also healthier than the middle class. What this means, he said, is that government policies - including those not directly aimed at the poor - in everything from taxation to education ought to be drafted with an eye to the health effects they may have. "If you focus only on the deprivation, only on the worst off, you're focusing on a small part of the problem," Marmot said. "One has to deal with this as a middle-class problem as well as one of the lower class." Marmot is the author of two important epidemiological studies: Whitehall, in the 1960s, and Whitehall II, in 1985. Both studies examined the health of members of the British Civil Service and showed a clear decline in health with each decrease in job grade. Marmot also worked on the Acheson report, issued in 1998, which made 39 recommendations to the British government on how to reduce the social inequalities that impact health. Marmot centered his talk on 10 public health messages he was asked to draft for the World Health Organization for eventual use in a public health advertising campaign. Marmot said there was remarkable agreement among fellow researchers as to what the messages should be:
Lisa Berkman, Norman Professor of Health, Social Behavior, and Epidemiology and chair of the School of Public Health's Department of Health and Social Behavior, said Marmot's work has attracted attention at SPH so she expected a good turnout. "There's an enormous amount of interest in this topic at the school," Berkman said. One sign of that interest, she said, is the numerous offices and organizations that sponsored his talk. In addition to the Department of Health and Social Behavior, the event was also sponsored by SPH Dean Barry Bloom, the School's Departments of Health Policy and Management and Epidemiology, as well as the John F. Kennedy School of Government's Multidisciplinary Program in Inequality and Social Policy. "I think it's a real reflection of Michael's work that it spans so many departments," Berkman said. Lisa Bates, a student at the School of Public Health, said she found the link between Marmot's work and government policy interesting. The United States, she said, could use a similar commitment to reducing health inequalities. "Why isn't there a health inequality impact being done on [President George] Bush's tax policy?" she asked. "I don't think the policies [here] are driven by the science."
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