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Impact of Political Economy on Population Health: A Systematic Review of Reviews

机译:政治经济学对人口健康的影响:系统评价评论

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摘要

>Background. Although there is a large literature examining the relationship between a wide range of political economy exposures and health outcomes, the extent to which the different aspects of political economy influence health, and through which mechanisms and in what contexts, is only partially understood. The areas in which there are few high-quality studies are also unclear.>Objectives. To systematically review the literature describing the impact of political economy on population health.>Search Methods. We undertook a systematic review of reviews, searching MEDLINE, Embase, International Bibliography of the Social Sciences, ProQuest Public Health, Sociological Abstracts, Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts, EconLit, SocINDEX, Web of Science, and the gray literature via Google Scholar.>Selection Criteria. We included studies that were a review of the literature. Relevant exposures were differences or changes in policy, law, or rules; economic conditions; institutions or social structures; or politics, power, or conflict. Relevant outcomes were any overall measure of population health such as self-assessed health, mortality, life expectancy, survival, morbidity, well-being, illness, ill health, and life span. Two authors independently reviewed all citations for relevance.>Data Collection and Analysis. We undertook critical appraisal of all included reviews by using modified Assessing the Methodological Quality of Systematic Reviews (AMSTAR) criteria and then synthesized narratively giving greater weight to the higher-quality reviews.>Main Results. From 4912 citations, we included 58 reviews. Both the quality of the reviews and the underlying studies within the reviews were variable. Social democratic welfare states, higher public spending, fair trade policies, extensions to compulsory education provision, microfinance initiatives in low-income countries, health and safety policy, improved access to health care, and high-quality affordable housing have positive impacts on population health. Neoliberal restructuring seems to be associated with increased health inequalities and higher income inequality with lower self-rated health and higher mortality.>Authors’ Conclusions. Politics, economics, and public policy are important determinants of population health. Countries with social democratic regimes, higher public spending, and lower income inequalities have populations with better health. There are substantial gaps in the synthesized evidence on the relationship between political economy and health, and there is a need for higher-quality reviews and empirical studies in this area. However, there is sufficient evidence in this review, if applied through policy and practice, to have marked beneficial health impacts.>Public Health Implications. Policymakers should be aware that social democratic welfare state types, countries that spend more on public services, and countries with lower income inequalities have better self-rated health and lower mortality. Research funders and researchers should be aware that there remain substantial gaps in the available evidence base. One such area concerns the interrelationship between governance, polities, power, macroeconomic policy, public policy, and population health, including how these aspects of political economy generate social class processes and forms of discrimination that have a differential impact across social groups. This includes the influence of patterns of ownership (of land and capital) and tax policies. For some areas, there are many lower-quality reviews, which leave uncertainties in the relationship between political economy and population health, and a high-quality review is needed. There are also areas in which the available reviews have identified primary research gaps such as the impact of changes to housing policy, availability, and tenure.
机译:>背景。尽管有大量文献研究了广泛的政治经济影响与健康结果之间的关系,政治经济学各个方面影响健康的程度以及通过何种机制和方式上下文,只是部分理解。 >目标。系统地审查描述政治经济学对人口健康影响的文献。>搜索方法。对评论进行了系统的审查,通过Google学术搜索搜索MEDLINE,Embase,国际社会科学书目,ProQuest公共卫生,社会学摘要,应用社会科学索引和摘要,EconLit,SocINDEX,Web of Science和灰色文献。 strong>选择标准。我们纳入了一些文献综述的研究。相关的风险是政策,法律或规则的差异或变化;经济状况;机构或社会结构;政治,权力或冲突。相关结果是对人口健康的任何总体衡量,例如自我评估的健康,死亡率,预期寿命,生存率,发病率,幸福感,疾病,不良健康状况和寿命。两位作者独立审查了所有引文的相关性。>数据收集和分析。我们使用修改后的评估系统评价的方法学质量(AMSTAR)标准对所有纳入的评价进行了严格的评估,然后综合叙述性地给予了更大的重视以获得更高质量的评论。>主要结果。根据4912次引用,我们纳入了58条评论。评论的质量和评论中的基础研究都是可变的。社会民主福利国家,较高的公共支出,公平贸易政策,义务教育范围的扩大,低收入国家的小额信贷倡议,健康与安全政策,改善的医疗服务以及高质量的经济适用房对人口健康产生积极影响。新自由主义的重组似乎与健康不平等加剧,收入不平等加剧,自测健康水平较低和死亡率较高有关。>作者的结论。政治,经济和公共政策是人口健康的重要决定因素。实行社会民主制度,增加公共支出,减少收入不平等的国家的人口健康状况较好。关于政治经济学与健康之间关系的综合证据存在很大差距,因此需要在这一领域进行更高质量的评论和实证研究。但是,如果通过政策和实践应用此审查,则有足够的证据表明对健康有明显的有益影响。>对公共健康的影响。决策者应意识到,社会民主福利的国家类型,花费较多的国家在公共服务方面,收入不平等程度较低的国家拥有更好的自我评估健康水平和较低的死亡率。研究资助者和研究人员应意识到,现有证据基础上仍存在巨大差距。其中一个领域涉及治理,政体,权力,宏观经济政策,公共政策和人口健康之间的相互关系,包括政治经济学的这些方面如何产生社会阶级过程和歧视形式,这些歧视在社会群体之间产生不同的影响。这包括所有权模式(土地和资本)和税收政策的影响。在某些地区,有许多低质量的评论,这给政治经济学和人口健康之间的关系留下了不确定性,因此需要高质量的评论。在其他领域,现有的评论也发现了主要的研究差距,例如住房政策,可用性和使用权变更的影响。

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