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posted by Fnord666 on Thursday February 27 2020, @01:55PM   Printer-friendly
from the imagine-that dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

London, United Kingdom - A decade of "austerity" - a political programme of slashing public spending on services in a bid to reduce government budget deficits - has seen significant effects on the health and wellbeing of Britons, new research has reported.

Life expectancy has stalled and mortality rates have increased, especially for the poorest in the United Kingdom, according to a report commissioned by the Institute of Health Equity.

The report, Health Equity in England: The Marmot Review Ten Years On, was launched on Tuesday and sees Sir Michael Marmot, a former president of the World Medical Association, updating his influential 2010 report, having been asked by the then-Labour government to study the question: "Is inequality making us sick?"

Marmot's latest research analysed a wealth of data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) and Public Health England to explore what has happened since his last landmark report. And the answer can only be summarised as: Not only is inequality making us sick but it is killing us quicker.

In the past decade - for the first time in 120 years of increasing life expectancy in England - life expectancy has stalled for those people living in the UK's 10 percent most deprived areas, particularly in the northeast.

Among women from the most deprived areas - especially British women of Bangladeshi and Pakistani origin - life expectancy fell between 2010-2012 and again between 2016-2018.

Mortality rates have meanwhile increased for people aged between 45 and 49 - the generation that grew up under former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's administrations. The report details how life expectancy follows the social gradient - the more deprived the area, the shorter the life expectancy.

Marmot's data analysis finds that, as the social gradient has become steeper, so inequalities in life expectancy have also increased.

Austerity has adversely affected the social determinants that impact on health in the short, medium and long term. Austerity will cast a long shadow over the lives of the children born and growing up under its effects

:- Professor Sir Michael Marmot


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 28 2020, @03:48PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 28 2020, @03:48PM (#964138)

    Greek ruled the ancient world until Roman took over
    Roman rules much longer and their power disappeared and break out
    Byzantine ruled much longer and was slowly losing power to the Ottomans
    Ottomans ruled for a long time, in partnership with Venice in the market, but Venice economic power went to smoke when the Portuguese start the age of discoveries and took the spice market by sea. Ottoman slowly lost they power and almost nobody cared about then until they disappeared.
    The Portuguese ruled half of the world and to avoid war, shared it with Spain (the other half)... until the Portuguese king died young and the Spanish also got the Portuguese crown
    Spain ruled the world, but Ducht and English started to expand their power, as Spain (and Portugal) hadn't human resources to control all world.
    English and Dutch raised their economic power until so many countries also started to trade and their power slowly got dissolved.
    English still manage to got many of its power due to the industrial revolution, but WW1 stress then and pushed part of this power to the USA, France and Germany.
    WW2 destroyed the economic and industrial power from France and Germany and English borrow so much money that never again could recover their power. (they just finally finish paying the loans a few years ago) USA and Soviets pushed their industrial production to much higher values.
    Soviet power slowly faded due to bureaucratic communism and too much focus in cold war
    USA power are slowly fading away due to their aggressive "profit first" target, the rise of big companies having more power than countries and the rise of cheap china industrial power

    As you can see, no empire lasts forever, sooner or later internal and external problems will eat the "empire"
     

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 29 2020, @02:22PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 29 2020, @02:22PM (#964591)

    The "Byzantines" were the Eastern Roman Empire.
    Only the Western half of the Roman empire fell.

  • (Score: 2) by quietus on Saturday February 29 2020, @05:22PM

    by quietus (6328) on Saturday February 29 2020, @05:22PM (#964627) Journal

    Maybe first read a history book before posting.