What makes us sick? Is it genetics or lifestyle? Is it聽too many burgers, too much alcohol, not enough exercise? Not according to 91亚色 Professor Dennis Raphael, who, like the fourth-century BC philosopher Plato, attributes poor health to living conditions. Things like income level and people鈥檚 access to food, housing, education, and聽health and social services, are what determines whether people are ill or healthy, he says.
That鈥檚 contrary to what most Canadians believe, says Raphael in his new book , which looks at who stays healthy, who gets sick and why. It鈥檚 written with the goal of educating the聽informed Canadian, as well as university students.
Most people think luck, treatment options and lifestyle choices shape whether they are healthy or not. After all, that is the current mantra 鈥 eating better and exercising will lead to a healthier existence 鈥 a mantra that Canadians have wholeheartedly internalized. But that鈥檚 only part of the equation, and not the biggest part, says Raphael, a professor in 91亚色's School of Health Policy & Management in the Faculty of Health.
鈥淒ecades of research and hundreds of studies in Canada and elsewhere tell a different story: the primary factors that shape the health and well-being of Canadians聽鈥 the factors that will give us longer, better lives聽鈥 are to be found not in those much-discussed areas, but rather in the actual living conditions that Canadians experience on a daily basis,鈥 says Raphael in About Canada: Health聽and Illness.
These factors include whether people are wealthy or poor, employed or not, working conditions, access to quality education, health and social services, and the basics of food and affordable housing. These social determinants 鈥渁re crucial factors in the health and well-being of Canadians,鈥 he says.
鈥淐ontrary to the assumption that we have personal control over these factors, in most cases these living conditions are 鈥 for better or worse 鈥 imposed upon us in the normal course of everyday life.鈥
Left: Dennis Raphael
That鈥檚 in large part because of the policies, regulations and laws enacted by governments at all levels, which influence employment income, family benefits and social assistance, as well as the quality and availability of affordable housing, health and social services, and recreational opportunities. That includes 鈥渨hat happens when Canadians lose their jobs during economic downturns such as the one that Canada began experiencing in 2008,鈥 says Raphael.
鈥淕overnments also determine whether our children have access to affordable and high-quality child care and better-quality schools, the working conditions that we experience, and whether as seniors we receive levels of public pensions that allow us to live in dignity.鈥
Raphael wants to see changes in聽public policy that will affect Canadians鈥 health in a positive way. Through About Canada: Health聽and Illness, he wants the average Canadian to understand the role social determinants聽play in shaping health and what can be done to improve the situation through better public policies.
Raphael is the editor of , co-editor of and author of . He served as an adviser to the California Newsreel documentary series and the Deveaux Babin Productions Canadian documentary .
By Sandra McLean, YFile writer
Republished courtesy of YFile 鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.
