Sundhed og ulighed i sundhed i de nordiske lande

All five Nordic countries emphasise equal and easy access to healthcare. It is the purpose to explore to which extent the populations of these countries have reached good health and high degree of socio-economic equality of health. Each of the five countries has established extensive public health p...

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Main Authors: Christiansen, Terkel, Lauridsen, Jørgen Trankjær, Lyttkens, Carl Hampus, Ólafsdóttir, Thorhildur, Valtonen, Hannu
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://portal.findresearcher.sdu.dk/da/publications/d9b4e009-c9ed-4bd5-91b4-cc7568a22a85
https://findresearcher.sdu.dk/ws/files/129127769/WP_2017_6_new.pdf
id ftsydanskunivpub:oai:sdu.dk:publications/d9b4e009-c9ed-4bd5-91b4-cc7568a22a85
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spelling ftsydanskunivpub:oai:sdu.dk:publications/d9b4e009-c9ed-4bd5-91b4-cc7568a22a85 2023-05-15T16:52:54+02:00 Sundhed og ulighed i sundhed i de nordiske lande Health and inequalities in health in the Nordic countries Christiansen, Terkel Lauridsen, Jørgen Trankjær Lyttkens, Carl Hampus Ólafsdóttir, Thorhildur Valtonen, Hannu 2017-05-30 application/pdf https://portal.findresearcher.sdu.dk/da/publications/d9b4e009-c9ed-4bd5-91b4-cc7568a22a85 https://findresearcher.sdu.dk/ws/files/129127769/WP_2017_6_new.pdf eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Christiansen , T , Lauridsen , J T , Lyttkens , C H , Ólafsdóttir , T & Valtonen , H 2017 ' Health and inequalities in health in the Nordic countries ' Odense , pp. 1-35 . International comparison of health systems; health status; health equity. workingPaper 2017 ftsydanskunivpub 2022-08-14T09:40:20Z All five Nordic countries emphasise equal and easy access to healthcare. It is the purpose to explore to which extent the populations of these countries have reached good health and high degree of socio-economic equality of health. Each of the five countries has established extensive public health programmes, although with somewhat different emphasis on the causes of ill-health, such as individual behaviour or social circumstances. Attitudes have changed over time, though. We compare these countries to the UK and Germany by using data from the European Social Survey 2002 and 2012 in addition to OECD Statistics from the same years. Health is measured by self-assessed health in five categories, transformed to a cardinal scale using Swedish time trade-off weights. As socio-economic variable we use household income or length of education. Mean health, based on Swedish TTO weights applied to all countries, is above 0.93 in all the Nordic countries and the UK in 2012, while lower in Germany. Rates in good or very good health in the lower income half of the samples are above 0.6 in most countries and even higher in Iceland and Sweden, but below 0.5 in Germany. However, when displayed in a graph the concentration curves nearly follow the diagonal implying almost no income- or education related inequality in self-assessed health weighted by TTO based preferences. The difference is a natural consequence of using different methods. We compared four key life-style related determinants of ill health and found that while there were differences in relative levels between the countries, Germany had a relatively high level of three of these, followed by the UK. We found no association between level of resources used and health status. In general, the Nordic countries have accomplished good health for their populations and high degree of socioeconomic equality in health. Improvements in life-style related determinants of health would be possible, though. Report Iceland University of Southern Denmark Research Portal
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southern Denmark Research Portal
op_collection_id ftsydanskunivpub
language English
topic International comparison of health systems; health status; health equity.
spellingShingle International comparison of health systems; health status; health equity.
Christiansen, Terkel
Lauridsen, Jørgen Trankjær
Lyttkens, Carl Hampus
Ólafsdóttir, Thorhildur
Valtonen, Hannu
Sundhed og ulighed i sundhed i de nordiske lande
topic_facet International comparison of health systems; health status; health equity.
description All five Nordic countries emphasise equal and easy access to healthcare. It is the purpose to explore to which extent the populations of these countries have reached good health and high degree of socio-economic equality of health. Each of the five countries has established extensive public health programmes, although with somewhat different emphasis on the causes of ill-health, such as individual behaviour or social circumstances. Attitudes have changed over time, though. We compare these countries to the UK and Germany by using data from the European Social Survey 2002 and 2012 in addition to OECD Statistics from the same years. Health is measured by self-assessed health in five categories, transformed to a cardinal scale using Swedish time trade-off weights. As socio-economic variable we use household income or length of education. Mean health, based on Swedish TTO weights applied to all countries, is above 0.93 in all the Nordic countries and the UK in 2012, while lower in Germany. Rates in good or very good health in the lower income half of the samples are above 0.6 in most countries and even higher in Iceland and Sweden, but below 0.5 in Germany. However, when displayed in a graph the concentration curves nearly follow the diagonal implying almost no income- or education related inequality in self-assessed health weighted by TTO based preferences. The difference is a natural consequence of using different methods. We compared four key life-style related determinants of ill health and found that while there were differences in relative levels between the countries, Germany had a relatively high level of three of these, followed by the UK. We found no association between level of resources used and health status. In general, the Nordic countries have accomplished good health for their populations and high degree of socioeconomic equality in health. Improvements in life-style related determinants of health would be possible, though.
format Report
author Christiansen, Terkel
Lauridsen, Jørgen Trankjær
Lyttkens, Carl Hampus
Ólafsdóttir, Thorhildur
Valtonen, Hannu
author_facet Christiansen, Terkel
Lauridsen, Jørgen Trankjær
Lyttkens, Carl Hampus
Ólafsdóttir, Thorhildur
Valtonen, Hannu
author_sort Christiansen, Terkel
title Sundhed og ulighed i sundhed i de nordiske lande
title_short Sundhed og ulighed i sundhed i de nordiske lande
title_full Sundhed og ulighed i sundhed i de nordiske lande
title_fullStr Sundhed og ulighed i sundhed i de nordiske lande
title_full_unstemmed Sundhed og ulighed i sundhed i de nordiske lande
title_sort sundhed og ulighed i sundhed i de nordiske lande
publishDate 2017
url https://portal.findresearcher.sdu.dk/da/publications/d9b4e009-c9ed-4bd5-91b4-cc7568a22a85
https://findresearcher.sdu.dk/ws/files/129127769/WP_2017_6_new.pdf
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Christiansen , T , Lauridsen , J T , Lyttkens , C H , Ólafsdóttir , T & Valtonen , H 2017 ' Health and inequalities in health in the Nordic countries ' Odense , pp. 1-35 .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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