• Title of article

    Towards an epidemiological understanding of the effects of long-term institutional changes on population health: A case study of Canada versus the USA

  • Author/Authors

    Arjumand Siddiqi، نويسنده , , Clyde Hertzman، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
  • Pages
    15
  • From page
    589
  • To page
    603
  • Abstract
    This paper uses a comparative case study of Canada and the USA to argue that, in order to fully understand the associations between population health and the socioeconomic environment we must begin to place importance on the dynamic aspect of these factors—examining them as they evolve over time. In particular, for institutional and policy shifts that often unfold over decades, population health must attend to these big, slow moving processes by adopting a historical perspective to the knowledge base. We compare Canada and the USA on basic health outcomes and a range of determinants of health for which routine data have been collected for all or most of the period between 1950 and the present. During the analysis that follows, we are able to establish that, at the level of society (i) greater economic well being and spending on health care does not yield better health outcomes, that (ii) public provision and income redistribution trump economic success where population health is concerned, and (iii) that the gradual development of public provision represents the buildup of social infrastructure that has long-lasting effects on health status. Our case study shows what can be gleaned from a comparative perspective and a long-term view. The long view allows us to detect the gradual divergence in health status between these two societies and to trace potential institutional causes that would otherwise go unnoticed. The perspective introduced here, and in particular the comparison of Canada and the USA, provides strong support for the use of cross-national comparative work, and a historical perspective on the investigation of societies that successfully support population health.
  • Keywords
    Income inequality , Canada , USA , Structural determinants , Institutional determinants , social epidemiology , Historical analysis
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Serial Year
    2007
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Record number

    603229