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7 - Inequalities in Health and Wellbeing Across the Uk: A Local North-East Perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 March 2021

Adrian Bonner
Affiliation:
University of Stirling
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Summary

A City by the Sea

Yes I come from a city by the Sea

And its shores and its water have become a part of me

And when I die it's where I want to be

In a grave in that city by the Sea

I was born, I was raised upon the tide

And the salt, and the sea, yeah, it warms me up inside

Upon the sand, there is no place to hide

From the view where the ocean meets the sky

Yes it's cold and it's hard where I come from

And you do what your dad did or you don't quite belong

Forget all that ‘cause we’ll do as we please

There is life in my city by the Sea

Martin Longstaff, 2012

Introduction

Chapter 2 of this book, by the Association of Directors of Public Health, provides a review of the system changes of public health, moving from the National Health Service (NHS) back to management by local authorities. The authors of that chapter also point to the major concerns about the limited potential for delivery upstream of health prevention and promotion that was due to reductions in funding from central government to local authorities. The Association of Directors of Public Health has long championed taking a whole-system and long-term view about how we create, enable and sustain the health and wellbeing of everyone in society.

This chapter will identify the challenges facing the North-East from a population health perspective, and the implications for the area of the contemporary context of the reductions in funding that widen health inequalities and create challenges in the labour market. It will consider the potential benefits of building new approaches that address these challenges using community assets, place-based, targeted, collaborative approaches and are based heavily on community ownership, participation and voice.

The chapter will review the responses of local authorities (LAs) in the North-East to reduced central government funding, examine key issues such as supporting vulnerable groups (children/young people, older people, homeless, unemployed and so on), then highlight LA and community responses and innovation approaches to supporting people via health and wellbeing strategies.

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Chapter
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Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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