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Public Health challenges in the South West. Dr Shona Arora Centre Director, Avon, Gloucestershire and Wiltshire Public Health England. Key Issues. Demographic pressures Inequalities Financial challenges for Local Authorities & the NHS
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Public Health challenges in the South West Dr Shona Arora Centre Director, Avon, Gloucestershire and Wiltshire Public Health England
Key Issues • Demographic pressures • Inequalities • Financial challenges for Local Authorities & the NHS Wider, but fragmented system – how do we work together?
Public Health Outcomes Framework Where is the SW an overall outlier? • Healthcare and preventable mortality: • suicides (5/13 LAs worse than national) • Health Improvement: • Smoking in pregnancy (4/13 LAs) • Excess weight in children (6/13) • Injuries in young people (4/13) • Health checks take up (7/13)
LGA Graph of Doom • Councils were cut earlier and harder than the rest of the public sector as the government began to implement its deficit reduction policy • •National gap in income versus expenditure of £16.5b by 2019/20
Inequalities • Marmot review (2010) ‘Fair Society, Healthy Lives’ • Differences in health outcomes reflect, and are caused by, social and economic inequalities in society • Genetics, lifestyle and access to healthcare are not the only factors that cause health inequalities • People in poorer areas die earlier but spend more of their shorter lives with a disability • Cost to NHS = More than £5bn a year • Response needs to be across the lifecourse, and proportionate to need
Life Expectancy and deprivation in the SW • Life expectancy continues to rise generally but is below the national average in certain parts of the SW: • E.g. Plymouth, Gloucester, Swindon • Gaps in life expectancy of 8+ years within some areas • Deprivation varies across the SW, which also has some of the least deprived areas in England, but is often in small pockets in more affluent LAs
Influences on population health King’s Fund summary:
Public Health Challenges • What is the balance between the full range of actions we need to take – from prevention to palliation, from cradle to grave , that will ensure health & wellbeing into the future, and help to ensure are services are affordable? • How do we stop health inequalities from increasing? • How do we build a lifecourse approach into our approach to the challenges facing health & social care? • How do we develop a stronger evidence base? And disseminate good practice and evidence more quickly?
Link between social and health inequalities • How can the NHS take action? • Treating patients – Every Contact Counts, PH in Clinical Networks • Community leadership through H&WBB – action on wider determinants • Advocacy for most disadvantaged • Preventative Strategies, e.g. primary care