by Susan Rosenthal
The United States spends more on health care than any other industrial nation, yet it has the highest infant death rates and the lowest life expectancy. How can this be?
The problem is generally attributed to too many people having no access to medical care. A national medical plan that covers everyone is desperately needed, because Americans without medical insurance die at twice the rate of those with insurance.1 However, raising the general health of the population requires more fundamental change.
Studies show that social inequality affects the health of populations more than any other factor, more than diet, smoking, exercise and access to medical care.2 Americans suffer the worst health statistics in the industrialized world because they live in the most unequal society in the industrialized world.
Both poor health and lack of access to medical care are symptoms of growing inequality. In 1970 the wealthiest 0.1 percent of Americans took in 100 times the average annual income. By 2001, they were taking 560 times the average annual income. In 1980, U.S. life expectancy ranked 14th in the world. By 2007, it ranked 29th.
Inequality is generated by capitalism. Capital is created when employers pay workers less than the value of the goods and services they produce. The resulting profit, or capital, is used to extract more capital. As this process repeats over time, capital accumulates at the top of society, inequality grows, and the health of the entire population suffers, not just those on the bottom.3
Inequality Kills
A study of 282 metropolitan areas in the U.S. found that the greater the difference in income, the more the death rate rose for all income levels, not just for the poor. Researchers calculated that if income inequality could be reduced to the lowest level found in the United States, it would save as many lives as would be saved by eradicating heart disease or preventing all deaths from lung cancer, diabetes, motor vehicle crashes, HIV infection, suicide and homicide combined!4 We would see even greater benefits if we eliminated social inequality altogether.
Consider the lives that would be saved just by ending racial inequality. Without racism, death rates for Black and White Americans would be the same. Yet, every year, Black Americans suffer 300 more deaths per 100,000 people than White Americans. Compare these 300 additional deaths with the 2005 U.S. homicide rate of fewer than 6 per 100,000. Do the math. Racism kills 50 times more people than die at the hands of individual murderers.
Inequality kills kids. Forty-two nations have lower infant death rates than the U.S. The infant death rate in the capital of the U.S. is more than double the infant death rate in the capital of China. In 25 nations, people live longer, on average, than they do in America.
Inequality is so destructive that it can counter the benefits of higher incomes. Studies show that poorer people living in more equal nations tend to be healthier and live longer than more-affluent people living in more unequal nations. For example, middle-income people in Britain enjoy better health than wealthier Americans.5
Men living in Bangladesh, one of the world’s poorest countries, are more likely to reach age 65 than Black American men living in Harlem. Harlem men have higher incomes than Bangladeshi men but live in a more unequal society. Black Americans tend to die prematurely from cardiovascular and other diseases that are linked with class and race inequality.6
How does inequality do so much damage?
Power = Health
A study of the highly-stratified British civil service found that health deteriorated as social status fell. This decline in health could not be explained by smoking, exercise or body weight.7 Income is not the factor, because professionals who earn less than non-professionals still enjoy better health.8
The answer lay in the surprising finding that those near the top of the power structure had worse health than those at the top, even though their life-styles were essentially the same.7 The only difference that could account for this is social power.
People with more control over their lives enjoy better health. Bosses live the longest, healthiest lives because they have the most power. As power diminishes, stress rises and health deteriorates. This relationship between social status and health has been found in every nation studied, including the United States.9
A 2008 study found widening differences in health between income levels in America. (Income is often used to measure social status.) The nation’s poorest adults were nearly five times more likely to be in “poor or fair” health than the richest, and at every income level the wealthier group was healthier than the next lower one. This trend was seen in all racial groups.10 Michael Marmot, who studies the link between social status and health, explains,
“Your position in the hierarchy very much relates to how much control you have over your life…Sustained, chronic and long-term stress is linked to low control over life circumstances.”11
Under capitalism, only a few people get to make the important decisions. The rest of us get no say over how work will be organized and how social resources will be used. We don’t get to decide if we will build more schools or more prisons, or go to war or make peace.
Exclusion from decision-making is strongly linked with cardiovascular disease,12 and the more powerless a person feels, the faster the disease progresses.13 Oppressed sections of the working-class suffer the highest rates of cardiovascular disease,14 because they have the least social control.
People with little control over demanding jobs are more likely to be overweight and have high cholesterol regardless of age, amount of exercise and smoking habits. By itself, hard work is not bad for your health unless there is also a lack of control. The most health-damaging jobs saddle workers with great responsibility (e.g. patient care) while denying them the resources needed to meet those responsibilities (enough time to do what is needed).15
In Unhealthy Societies: The Afflictions of Inequality, Richard Wilkinson links inequality with health-damaging stress. Children show rising levels of stress hormones as their social position falls.16 Nurses who work under “unfair and unreasonable” bosses have higher blood pressure.17 Simply speaking with someone with higher social status will raise your blood pressure.18 The greatest damage is done to those who are put down and ordered around their entire lives.
“Stress triggers a higher heart rate, a release of adrenaline, glucose and other neurological responses to help the body respond to a short-term threat. But when extended over long periods of time, they can harm the cardiovascular and immune systems, making individuals more vulnerable to a wide range of conditions including infections, diabetes, high blood pressure, heart attack, stroke, asthma and aggression.”19
Solidarity is the Best Medicine
It makes sense that inequality would make people sick. Human survival has always depended on the cooperation that flows from strong social bonds. People who pull together enjoy better health and live longer.20 Strong social ties may explain why Hispanic Americans have lower rates of chronic illness than White Americans, despite their lower incomes.21
Human beings cannot be healthy in a world that generates inequality at every level. The unequal relationship between bosses and workers is maintained by divide-and-rule policies that generate many more inequalities based on sex, skin color, religion, nationality, etc. From birth to death, society ranks people on a vertical scale, with those higher up being treated as more worthy than those lower down. These divisions rupture social bonds and generate sickness throughout the population.
Universal access to medical care would reduce some of this inequality. However, even the best medical system cannot eliminate the health-damaging effects of poverty, war, social discrimination, unsafe work, bad housing, poor schools, and being denied the right to make decisions that affect our lives. To end these miseries, we must eliminate class divisions and all the other inequalities that follow.
Solidarity is the best medicine for inequality. The fight for universal health care is a fight for equal rights. To win both, we must unite large numbers of people across all the divisions that currently keep us weak and sick.
At the Cannes screening of SiCKO, director Michael Moore stated, “The bigger issue in the film is, ‘Who are we as a people?’”
Human sickness is a product of sick social relationships, and human health is a product of healthy social relationships. Replacing class divisions with a cooperative, egalitarian society would reduce the burden of disease and raise the level of health more than any other measure.
References
1. Hadley, J. (2002). Sicker and poorer: The consequences of being uninsured. Kaiser Family Foundation.
2. Wilkinson, R.G. (1992). National mortality rates: the impact of inequality? Am J Public Health, Vol 82, Issue 8, pp. 1082-1084. See also, PBS (2008). Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making Us Sick?
3. Rosenthal, S. (2006). POWER and powerlessness, Chapter 11, “Divide and Rule.”
4. Lynch, J.W. et. al. (1998). Income inequality and mortality in metropolitan areas of the United States. Am J Public Health Vol. 88, pp.1074-1080.
5. Quoted in Bowe, C. (2008). U.S. society helping to make people sicker. The Financial Times Limited, February 29.
6. McCord C, Freeman H.P. (1990). Excess mortality in Harlem. New England Journal of Medicine Vol. 322, pp.173-7.
7. DHSS (1980). Inequalities in health: Report of a research working group. Middlesex: U.K. Author.
8. Cited in Schmidt. J. (2000). Disciplined minds: A critical look at salaried professionals and the soul-battering system that shapes their lives. Rowman & Littlefield, pp.103-104.
9. A discussion of American studies linking class and heath can be found in Schmidt. J. (2000). Disciplined minds: A critical look at salaried professionals and the soul-battering system that shapes their lives. Rowman & Littlefield, pp.103-104.
10. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. (2008). Overcoming Obstacles to Health.
11. Cohen, P. (2004). Forget lonely. Life is healthy at the top. New York Times, May 15.
12. Raphael, D. (2001), Inequality is bad for our hearts: Why low income and social exclusion are major causes of heart disease in Canada, North York Heart Health Network, Toronto, Canada.
13. Everson S, et. Al. (1997). Hopelessness and 4-year progression of carotid atherosclerosis. Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology, Vol. 17, No.8, pp.1490-5.
14. Raphael, D. (2002). Poor choice or no choice?: Even more evidence links low income with disease so why keep blaming lifestyle choices like fries? The Toronto Star, October 11, p.F6.
15. Kivimääki, M., et. al.(2002). Work stress and risk of cardiovascular mortality: prospective cohort study of industrial employees. BMJ October 19. Vol. 325, p.857.
16. Lupien S.J. et al. (2000). Child’s stress hormone levels correlate with mother’s socioeconomic status and depressive state Biol Psychiatry Nov 15. Vol.48, pp. 976-80.
17. CBC. (2003). Bad bosses bring blood pressure to boil: Study. June 24.
18. Long, J.M, et. al. (1982). The effect of status on blood pressure during verbal communication. Journal of Behavioral Medicine Vol.5, pp.165-71
19. Cohen, P. (2004). Forget lonely. Life is healthy at the top. New York Times, May 15.
20. Cacioppo, J.T. et al. (2002). Loneliness and health: Potential mechanisms. Psychosom Med May/June, Vol. 64, pp.407-17. Also, House, J.S. et. al. (1988). Social relationships and health. Science, Vol. 24, pp.540-545.
21. Cited in Cohen, P. (2004). Forget lonely. Life is healthy at the top. New York Times, May 15.








July 11th, 2008 at 10:33 pm
May 26/07
I lived in the Soviet Union most of my life.It was the most egalitarian society imaginable. And yet the health of the population was much worse than in the capitalist USA. Also bullying, police brutality and hatred of anyone different was even more rampant than in the USA. Trust me, I lived there. Despite egalitarian rhetoric, violent underclass and restive minorities were met with an iron fist in the communist USSR. I will hate myself for agreeing with Rush Limbaugh, but liberalism is indeed a disease.
July 11th, 2008 at 10:37 pm
May 26/07
Alex: You have a bizarre concept of equality.
You say that “the Soviet Union was the most egalitarian society imaginable” and then describe bullying, police brutality, and hatred of anyone different!
Actions speak louder than words. No matter what it calls itself, any nation that oppresses sections of the population is not egalitarian, but divided into classes. As I explain in POWER and Powerlessness, capitalism, with all of its inequalities, was restored in the USSR during the 1920s.
July 12th, 2008 at 3:08 pm
May 26/07
Your article is interesting. However, I think it misses a lot of crucial points. First, we do not have a health care system but a sickness care system because there are more profits to be made in treating sickness than in preventing illness. Preventing illness requires that people eat fresh, whole, unprocessed, and nutritious food.
People in the U.S. have poorer health than people in other nations primarily because they eat more poorly. There are far more fast food restaurants in the U.S. than in any other country, there is far more processed, packaged, and junk food sold in the U.S., and there is far more advertising for that food (and those restaurants) than in other countries.
Just imagine the disruption to our capitalist grow or die system’s “profitability” if people were educated to eat fresh, whole, unprocessed, and nutritious food instead of the the stale, processed junk food that they now eat.
Getting back to my first point, there are more profits to be made in treating sickness than in preventing illness. Imagine what would happen to the drug and other companies that make profits off of sickness. They would go out of business if there was less/no sickness in the U.S. Also, why not pay doctors more to keep people well (as the ancient Chinese did)?
Of course, there are environmental and other factors involved in creating illness like pesticides, environmental toxins, etc. But I feel (and there there is much evidence to back up the claim) that food is the most important factor. And there are the large farming and multinational conglomerates that have destroyed the family farms and the soil in their quest to grow and expand.
I am sure you get the picture. If we had a system that put the health and welfare of the people ahead of the profits of the corporations, we would have a healthier (and not just physically) society.
July 12th, 2008 at 3:15 pm
May 26/07
Larry: I agree that we don’t have a health-care system, but a disease-care system, and I refer you to my article, “Wanted: Health Care not Disease Care.
http://susanrosenthal.com/articles/wanted-health-care-not-disease-care
And the way we eat is definitely affected by class. Processed food is much cheaper than fresh whole foods, so that the working class has a more nutrient-poor and toxic -laden diet than the middle and upper classes.
However, while food is very important, I disagree that it is the primary determinant of health. Class is the key to one’s ability to eat well, work safely, live in safer homes and neighborhoods and in general live a longer, healthier life.
Putting health first requires us to eliminate class divisions, so that everyone can access the means of producing good health.