4.4 • 785 Ratings
🗓️ 14 December 2021
⏱️ 28 minutes
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0:00.0 | When data showed that ethnic minorities were more likely to fall severely ill and die from COVID-19, |
0:16.0 | experts and pundits asked why. As we learned more through the course of the pandemic, |
0:21.7 | it became increasingly clear that its socioeconomic factors |
0:24.9 | that contribute heavily to COVID outcomes. |
0:28.0 | It's densely packed multi-generational households |
0:30.5 | and jobs on the front line of retail, |
0:32.7 | health, and transport that have contributed to this divide. |
0:36.2 | We've long known that where you live, who you live |
0:38.6 | with, how you grew up, and how much money you have can have long-lasting consequences for your |
0:43.6 | health. Those who live in polluted inner city neighborhoods, where drug abuse may be rife, |
0:48.9 | are of course going to have different health outcomes compared to the residents of Leafy Suburban |
0:53.3 | London. We've known this through the work of Sir Michael Marmot, who gave his compared to the residents of Leafy Suburban London. |
0:58.3 | We've known this through the work of Sir Michael Marmot, who gave his name to the landmark Marmot Review. |
1:00.2 | But what do these findings mean for healthcare professionals and policy makers? |
1:04.4 | Do doctors and nurses now also have to think about air pollution and green spaces? |
1:09.0 | Is this holistic view of health helpful and indeed possible? |
1:13.9 | I'm Kate Andrews and in a special episode of The Spectators podcast, I'm going to be trying to |
1:19.0 | answer this question with a panel of experts. We're joined by Charmaine Griffiths, head of the |
1:23.9 | British Heart Foundation, by Chimney Bottatt, UK and Ireland managing director of the |
1:28.9 | pharmaceutical company Novartis, which is kindly sponsoring this podcast, and by Sir Michael |
1:34.4 | Marmot himself, who's been looking at this question in today's Britain. Welcome all. |
1:39.5 | Michael, can you start by explaining why you think socio-economic factors should be considered as a part of health care? |
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