THE leading global expert on health inequalities and Director of the UCL Institute of Health Equity (IHE), Professor Sir Michael Marmot, has written a damning letter to party leaders and MPs across the country, after a new UCL IHE report confirmed that UK government policies are cutting people’s lives short.

In a new report, England’s Widening Health Gap: Local Places Falling Behind, the IHE emphasises how the north-south health gap has increased, people’s health has deteriorated, and health inequalities have widened. Sir Michael is imploring parliamentarians to act, if they care about their local population’s health.

In the letter, he writes: “Put simply, Britain is a poor, sick country, getting sicker, with a few rich and healthy people; the results of a dismal failure of central government policies since 2010. Not only is health the foremost concern of your local constituents, communities and businesses, health is also an indicator of how well a nation is performing. Unfortunately, Britain is performing poorly.”

Using data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), the Office for Health Improvement and Disparities (OHID) and the National Audit Office (NAO), the IHE has looked at every local authority in England and, for each one, plotted levels of health, inequalities in health and cuts in their spending power. Local authorities fund many of the services e.g., housing, education and social care, which support or ameliorate the drivers of health inequalities.

In its report, the IHE has provided information from 17 local authorities with statistically significant increases in inequalities in life expectancy between 2010-12 and the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Sir Michael has written to the 58 MPs whose constituencies lie wholly or partially in these local authorities, as well as each area’s local authority leaders. These include six former or current cabinet ministers, including the former Prime Minister Liz Truss, the Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, Secretary, Michael Gove and former Housing, Communities and Local Government Secretary, Robert Jenrick.

New report key findings:

  • Overall, life expectancy stalled between 2010-12 and 2020-22 (during the Covid-19 pandemic).
  • Inequalities in life expectancy increased nationally for both sexes between 2010-12 & 2017-19.
  • In six of the nine English regions there have been statistically significant increases in inequalities in life expectancy for women (North East, North West, Yorkshire and the Humber, East of England, East Midlands, South West) and three for men (North East, Yorkshire and the Humber and East of England.
  • There were 14 local authority areas with significant increases in inequalities in female life expectancy, and three in which inequalities in life expectancy had increased significantly for males; there were no statistically significant decreases in inequalities in life expectancy for men or women in any of the English local authorities.
  • Since 2010 central government cuts to local authorities mean their spending power per head of population had fallen by an average of 34 per cent across England in 2019/20.

Sir Michael said: “It is no surprise that local authorities are struggling to make ends meet and that people are living shorter lives than they should. If you slash the services that support people then health will be harmed. Levelling up was supposed to provide badly needed funding for the most deprived areas. But it was a derisory amount and, as a result, never going to improve health.”

Since 2011 life expectancy has been increasing at a slower rate than it had during previous decades. But even the modest increase has not been uniformly enjoyed across England. People living in the north of England and women in the most deprived neighbourhoods saw a fall in their life expectancy, even before the pandemic struck.

Funding cuts and tax rises hit the most vulnerable

Based on National Audit Office (NAO) figures, the IHE has calculated that funding from national government to local authorities (e.g., through the revenue support grant) fell by an average of 41 per cent per head of population in England between 2010/11 and 2015/16, and the tax raised by councils themselves fell by eight per cent per head of population.

After 2015/16, extra revenue raising powers, including increasing Council Tax, allowed councils to increase the amount raised each year, so that by 2019/20 this amount, per head of population, was four per cent more than in 2010/11 in real terms. However, government support per head of population was 58 per cent below that in 2010/11, resulting in overall council spending power per head of population down by 34 per cent in 2010.

These funding cuts and the increases in revenue raising from local authorities have fallen disproportionately on the most vulnerable, who, alongside the cost-of-living crisis, have felt the impact of Council Tax because it is mostly a flat tax and not related to income. The effect of this is seen in council tax arrears, which have increased by 70 per cent in the past five years in the 100 largest councils.

Health equity should be central to all UK government policies

Now the IHE is calling on the government to put health equity and well-being at the heart of all policies by following the eight ‘Marmot Principles’.

“This is a dismal state of affairs”, continued Sir Michael. “I’m saying to party leaders: make this the central plank of the next government – stop policies harming health and widening health inequalities. To MPs: if you care about the health of your constituents, you must be appalled by their deteriorating health. It’s time for action and political leadership across the board.

“Important as is the NHS – publicly funded and free at the point of use – action is needed on the social determinants of health: the conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work and age. These social conditions are the main causes of health inequalities.”

The IHE proposes the appointment of an independent Health Equity Commissioner and establishment of a new cabinet-level health equity and well-being cross-departmental committee.

Deputy Director of the IHE, Dr Jessica Allen, who oversees the Institute’s work with local places, explained: “In the UK the IHE is working with more than 40 local areas, and businesses and other sectors who are prioritising health and reducing health inequalities by taking action on the social determinants of health, where they can. They are doing their best to protect lives and promote health equity with their dwindling and inadequate funds. We know what to do. We are seeing a cultural shift and more action on health inequalities in those areas, where local leaders from different sectors are working together to promote health equity, which is magnificent.”

* Read the report here.

* Source: Institute of Health Equity