Social Inequality in Population Developmental Health: An Equity and Justice Issue

被引:5
|
作者
Keating, Daniel P. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
关键词
SOCIOECONOMIC DISPARITIES; BRAIN; MORTALITY; INCOME; DISCRIMINATION; NEUROSCIENCE; EPIGENETICS; ENVIRONMENT; BEHAVIOR;
D O I
10.1016/bs.acdb.2015.12.002
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
The conceptual framework for this chapter focuses on outcomes in developmental health as a key indicator of equity. Not all disparities in developmental health are indicators of a failure of equity and justice, but those that are clearly linked to social patterns in theoretically coherent and empirically substantial ways serve as a powerful diagnostic tool. They are especially diagnostic when they point to social factors that are remediable, especially in comparison to societies in which such social disparities are sharply lower (Keating, Siddiqi, & Nguyen, 2013). In this chapter, I review the theoretical links and empirical evidence supporting this central claim and propose that there is strong evidence for the following critical links: (a) there is a compelling empirical connection between disparities in social circumstances and disparities in developmental health outcomes, characterized as a social gradient effect; (b) "drilling down" reveals the core biodevelopmental mechanisms that yield the social disparities that emerge across the life course; (c) in turn, life course effects on developmental health have an impact on societies and populations that are revealed by "ramping up" the research to consider international comparisons of population developmental health; and (d) viewing this integrated evidence through the lens of equity and justice helps to break the vicious cycle that reproduces social inequality in a distressingly recurring fashion.
引用
收藏
页码:75 / 104
页数:30
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Health Disparities and Health Equity: The Issue Is Justice
    Braveman, Paula A.
    Kumanyika, Shiriki
    Fielding, Jonathan
    LaVeist, Thomas
    Borrell, Luisa N.
    Manderscheid, Ron
    Troutman, Adewale
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2011, 101 : S149 - S155
  • [2] Social justice, health equity, and mental health
    Bhugra, Dinesh
    Tribe, Rachel
    Poulter, Daniel
    [J]. SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 52 (01) : 3 - 10
  • [3] Health Equity Is Pursuing Social Justice in Health
    Davis, Melissa A.
    Flores, Efren J.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF RADIOLOGY, 2022, 19 (01) : 99 - 100
  • [4] Promoting Health Equity and Social Justice
    Murray, Donna F.
    Ball, Richard D.
    [J]. PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT CLINICS, 2024, 9 (04) : 515 - 526
  • [5] Health Equity, Social Justice, and Human Rights
    Wang, Kathy
    [J]. HEALTH AND HUMAN RIGHTS, 2012, 14 (02) : 118 - 118
  • [6] Nursing is a health equity and social justice movement
    Rudner, Nancy
    [J]. PUBLIC HEALTH NURSING, 2021, 38 (04) : 687 - 691
  • [7] Health equity, social justice and human rights
    Lorenc, Theo
    [J]. CRITICAL PUBLIC HEALTH, 2012, 22 (03) : 373 - 374
  • [8] Social justice, human rights and health equity
    Marmot, Michael
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 43 (03) : E423 - E424
  • [9] Health is democracy: diversity, equity, and social justice
    Onocko-Campos, Rosana Teresa
    Pinto, Isabela Cardoso de Matos
    Barreto, Mauricio Lima
    [J]. CADERNOS DE SAUDE PUBLICA, 2023, 39 (02):
  • [10] “Racism as a public health issue” APS racism series: at the intersection of equity, science, and social justice
    Joseph L. Wright
    James N. Jarvis
    Lee M. Pachter
    Leslie R. Walker-Harding
    [J]. Pediatric Research, 2020, 88 : 696 - 698