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Policy approaches to health inequalities
in Scotland and England
Assessing similarities and differences in post-
devolution policy responses to health inequalities




                       Dr Katherine Smith
                              Katherine.Smith@ed.ac.uk

                    Global Public Health Unit, Social Policy
                      School of Social & Political Science
                           University of Edinburgh
       (ESRC-MRC postdoctoral fellowship, grant number PTA-037-27-0181)
Current concern: The failure of policy efforts to reduce
             health inequalities in England
“Has the English strategy to reduce health
inequalities failed? The importance of this question
cannot easily be overstated. The explicit and
sustained      commitment     of    recent    Labour
governments to reduce health inequalities was
historically and internationally unique […]. Their
policy initiatives built on decades of public health
research, and more often than not were based on
empirical evidence which had been collected and
summarized by leading public health experts. Labour
stayed in power for an exceptional 13 years, and in
Western democracies it is difficult to imagine a
longer window of opportunity for tackling health
inequalities. If this did not work, what will?”
(Mackenbach, 2010)
What do we know about post-devolution
      health policy in Scotland and England?
   Most analyses focus either on healthcare policies or
    on specific public health issues (e.g. health
    inequalities or tobacco control).
   The story that emerges from this body of work
    suggests healthcare policies have diverged
    significantly (e.g. Greer 2005, Bevan 2010, Propper et
    al 2009, Connolly et al 2010)…
   … whilst public health policies have remained
    remarkably similar, despite clear differences in initial
    intentions/rhetoric (e.g. Cairney, 2009; Smith et al
    2009).
Is Scotland Emerging as a UK Public Health
                  Policy Leader?
   Interviewees across the UK are consistently
    citing Scotland as a public health policy leader
    in the UK, following its leadership with smoke-
    free public places and minimum unit pricing
    for alcohol.
   Scotland now appears to have an opportunity
    to replace its tag as the ‘sick man of Europe’
    with a new reputation for health policy
    innovation (e.g. Smith & Hellowell, 2012).
Yet Policy Approaches to Health Inequalities
        Remain Remarkably Consistent

Aspect of policy approach       England                             Scotland
How were health inequalities    As health gaps resulting from       As health gaps resulting from
conceptualised?                 health deprivation.                 health deprivation.
Commitment to joined-up         Yes.                                Yes.
approach?
Reference to empirical          Yes.                                Yes.
evidence?
Targets for reducing health     Yes, specific health inequalities   Yes, specific health inequalities
inequalities?                   targets set in 2001, to be          targets set in 2004, to be
                                achieved by 2010.                   achieved by 2008/2010.
How were targets articulated?   To reduce health gaps (mainly       To improve the health of the
                                between areas).                     most deprived groups at a
                                                                    particular rate.
Where was responsibility for    Local NHS bodies (PCTs).            Local NHS bodies (Local
meeting health inequalities                                         Health Boards).
targets located?
The absence of evidence-based policy
in both contexts:
   Senior academic researcher: ‘The research [on health
    inequalities] has had absolutely no, well, it’s had very little
    impact on policies,’
   Civil servant (England): ‘My impression is that after about
    2001, unfortunately the sheer pace and scale of action
    required of the Labour government meant that evidence
    again got pushed onto the back burner […] just because
    government was producing more policies than it had time to
    master the evidence on.’
   Minister (Scotland): ‘I don’t think there’s very much evidence-
    based policy around yet.’
                                          Taken from Smith, 2007, 2008.
Comparing the evidence to policy responses for
            tackling health inequalities
Idea(s) about health inequalities    Are ideas are supported by    Are ideas are evident in Labour’s policies?
                                     research evidence?
Artefact and social selection        No                            No

Access to health services and        Minimally                     Significantly (esp. from 2004 onwards)
treatments
Contextual (place-based) ideas       Minimally                     Significantly (through area-based
                                                                   interventions)
Need to change people’s lifestyle-   L-Bs are linked to HIs but    Significantly (throughout the past decade
behaviours (L-Bs)                    are usually perceived to be   but especially since 2004).
                                     symptomatic of more
                                     ‘upstream’ causes
Material-structuralist               Yes                           Significantly evident in policy rhetoric but
                                                                   far more limited with regards to policy
                                                                   actions
Psychosocial and income              Significant support           References to social capital are evident but
inequalities                         (although some criticisms)    reference to income inequalities are
                                                                   absent
Lifecourse approaches                Yes                           A focus on particular social groups,
                                                                   especially children, is evident but ideas
                                                                   about the ‘lifecourse’ are scarce
1. Policymaking bodies as institutional filters
How Policy Silos Shape the Relationship with
                   Research
Civil servant (Scotland): ‘People don’t go traipsing
  through professional journals but you do have
  specialists within the Department as well. So, for
  example, on diet and physical activity, there is a Diet
  Co-ordinator, and there is a Physical Activity
  Coordinator, who are specialists in their own right…
  and in addition to that, you have specialists in terms
  of doctors and things like, many of whom do actually
  spend a bit of time with the journals.’
2. A lack of belief in alternative ways of
            organising society
A lack of belief in an alternative way of living

Academic: ‘I think… a government that isn’t…
  keen to pursue issues around… income
  redistribution… you know, that’s a reasonably
  popular thing to not do. Who wants to pay
  more taxes? And… if taxes go up for the
  richest, somehow or other everybody seems to
  feel they’re being affected by it so, unless the
  government is prepared to tackle that at a
  media level, nobody’s going to be unhappy
  with their decision… not to change taxation.’
3. The lack of institutional memory within
                      policy
The Re-cycling of Ideas

Academic: ‘What’s really struck me […] is we seem to do the same bits
  of work over and over again, you know? A demand will come for
  something and because… I don’t keep copies of these things, I think,
  ‘oh, I think we’ve done that before!’ And then somebody else will dig
  out… So on Monday, we’re doing a piece of work which I know we
  did two years ago… But… everybody’s changed so nobody knows
  that that’s what we did two years ago. […] [And] in the DH they’re
  now subcontracting a lot of their work… So… somebody, some
  agency will be given the job of coming up with something-or-other,
  and it’s like reinventing the wheel - they’ll have no knowledge of
  what the Department, or allied researchers, has already done. […]
  So I think that fragmentation, which you’ve got with the normal
  process of civil servants moving round is becoming intensified
  because of this process of giving the work to outsiders, who don’t
  even know what might have happened within the DH.’
4. Politicisation of the civil service
Aiming to give ministers ‘what they want’
Civil servant (England): ‘If you’ve got a problem, […] the first
   thing you do is to work back in the files and see what you said
   last time and then to ask one another what you think we
   should do and then to make a judgement about what
   ministers really want, what’s feasible and what’s politically
   this, that and the other.’ [My emphasis]

Former civil servant, Lord Bancroft: ‘seeing that advice which
  ministers want to hear falls with a joyous note on their ears,
  and advice which they need to hear falls on their ears with a
  rather dismal note, [civil servants] will tend to… make their
  advice what ministers want to hear rather than what they
  need to hear,’ (quoted in Hennessey 1995, p130).
5. Understanding the decisions health
    inequalities researchers make
The importance of research funders:

Senior academic researcher: ‘[A]cademics are entrepreneurial,
  they go where the money is and so […] if somebody says,
  ‘research project on X,’ you know, ‘cycling,’ we’d all start
  doing sociology of cycling or something, I don’t know
  [laughs].’

Senior academic: ‘[X - name of civil servant who is a personal
  friend of interviewee], is still amazed that I don’t know things
  like [policy] initiatives that are going on but then, can
  understand when I say, you know academics - we go on a
  need to know basis. […]. If there’s a call for research and
  there’s some funding, well, we’re learn about that, you know -
  in twenty-four hours we’ll know about that!’
Intentional influences on research by funders?:

Senior academic: ‘I think one of the difficulties is often
  when there are bids for research funding, it’s almost
  if the findings or, you know, the messages that are
  required are stated from the start almost. […] When
  one looks at research bids, it’s, there are strong
  steers in terms of what they’re looking for, what
  kinds of conclusions one’s being steered towards,
  what kinds of policy messages they want…’
Intentional influences on research by funders:

Senior policymaker (Scotland): ‘[T]here is a kind of tension in
   discussions which go on nowadays between… researchers, who
   basically say, ‘give us the money - I’ve got a great programme of
   research here… I can’t tell you too much about it, ‘cause the ideas
   are just beginning to… So, give me the money - you can trust me
   and… I’ll produce something. Don’t know what it is but, but
   something will happen.’ And on the other hand, people like me and
   […] my colleagues in the MRC, who say, ‘what did we buy for the
   money?’ And, ‘Well, I know you’re very interested in looking at…
   health inequalities but actually, I have a problem here - I am
   required to make policy in this area… at the moment, I have no hard
   facts at all… and I really would like some research done… and… by
   the way, I want it done within the next six months and I’ve got that
   amount of money available for it. So, I want you to give me the best
   answer you can within six months, given that amount of money.’
   And that’s, that’s the real world.’
The Need to Remain Optimistic

   Most researchers I interviewed wanted to
    make a difference so many described
    increasingly focusing on things that they felt
    could make a small difference.
6. How researchers package messages to
               policymakers
Deliberate Ambiguity:
Academic: ‘When I was at [Blank] I could have been much more… critical.
  It isn’t simply that I feel the funding source wouldn’t like me to say those
  things, I actually… would feel it would be a betrayal of the trust that the
  people who gave me the opportunity to spend my time doing that had
  in me… and I think, in a way, when I was working at [this organisation]
  and they are actually funded through [government department], I
  think… they would have looked at me and said, ‘how can you not have
  read what is appropriate to say?’ So I think the censoring is actually self-
  imposed. […] It isn’t that I think they would come the heavy on me, it’s…
  there’s an unwritten understanding that I won’t rock the boat when I’m
  writing in that guise. So… at an academic event, I feel I’m me, you know
  […] I can be much more pointed in the points I want to make… but… I
  think when I’m writing through a funding source, which is government…
  and I do out of, and maybe I shouldn’t, I do it out of a sense of loyalty
  to… the people who are trusting me not to say things that would make
  them feel uncomfortable… and cast into doubt the judgement that they
  had in saying I was the right person to do the job.’
Fitting in with perceptions of policy
preferences
Academic: ‘If you have poverty and adversity of that nature,
  nothing’s gonna save you. Now, they [policy makers] are not
  gonna like hear that. [Pause] On the other hand, I have to
  say, I think probably some people have enough clout that we
  don’t need to… be too tactful. But certainly when I was less
  experienced and I was putting in for money on [blanked] and
  health, we did produce papers which were - how can I put it?
  We weren’t coming out and saying we were absolutely sure
  that [blank] causes ill-health and there’s no element of
  selection. We actually found the perfect way through it,
  which was to say [removed for anonymity]. Now that, I think
  that’s probably true, actually, but… we were doing it, I was
  doing it, I was pushing people towards it in order to be clever.’
References

Bevan, G. (2010), Impact of devolution of healthcare in the UK: provider challenge in
    England and provider capture in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland? Journal of
    Health Services Research and Policy, 15(2): pp.67-68.
Cairney, P. (2009), The role of ideas in policy transfer: the case of UK smoking bans
    since devolution. Journal of European Public Policy 16: pp.471-88.
Connolly, S., Bevan, G. and Mays, N. (2010), Funding and Performance of Healthcare
    Systems in the Four Countries of the UK Before and After Devolution. London: The
    Nuffield Trust.
Greer, S. (2005), The Territorial Bases of Health Policymaking in the UK after
    Devolution. Regional and Federal Studies 15: pp.501-18.
Mackenbach, J.P. (2010) Has the English strategy to reduce health inequalities failed?
    Social Science & Medicine, 71:1249–53.
Propper, C., Sutton, M., Whitnall, C. and Windmeijer, F. (2009), Incentives and Targets
    in Hospital Care: Evidence from a natural experiment. Working paper no. 08/205.
    London: University of Bristol.
Smith, K.E., D.J. Hunter, T. Blackman, E. Elliott, A. Greene, B.E. Harrington, L. Marks, L.
    McKee, and G.H. Williams (2009), Divergence or convergence? Health inequalities
    and policy in a devolved Britain. Critical Social Policy 29: pp.216-242.
Smith, K.E. & Hellowell, M. (2012) Beyond Rhetorical Difference: A cohesive account of
    post-devolution developments in UK health policy. Social Policy & Administration,
    46(2): 178-198.

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Inequality policy Scotland and England

  • 1. Policy approaches to health inequalities in Scotland and England Assessing similarities and differences in post- devolution policy responses to health inequalities Dr Katherine Smith Katherine.Smith@ed.ac.uk Global Public Health Unit, Social Policy School of Social & Political Science University of Edinburgh (ESRC-MRC postdoctoral fellowship, grant number PTA-037-27-0181)
  • 2.
  • 3. Current concern: The failure of policy efforts to reduce health inequalities in England “Has the English strategy to reduce health inequalities failed? The importance of this question cannot easily be overstated. The explicit and sustained commitment of recent Labour governments to reduce health inequalities was historically and internationally unique […]. Their policy initiatives built on decades of public health research, and more often than not were based on empirical evidence which had been collected and summarized by leading public health experts. Labour stayed in power for an exceptional 13 years, and in Western democracies it is difficult to imagine a longer window of opportunity for tackling health inequalities. If this did not work, what will?” (Mackenbach, 2010)
  • 4. What do we know about post-devolution health policy in Scotland and England?  Most analyses focus either on healthcare policies or on specific public health issues (e.g. health inequalities or tobacco control).  The story that emerges from this body of work suggests healthcare policies have diverged significantly (e.g. Greer 2005, Bevan 2010, Propper et al 2009, Connolly et al 2010)…  … whilst public health policies have remained remarkably similar, despite clear differences in initial intentions/rhetoric (e.g. Cairney, 2009; Smith et al 2009).
  • 5. Is Scotland Emerging as a UK Public Health Policy Leader?  Interviewees across the UK are consistently citing Scotland as a public health policy leader in the UK, following its leadership with smoke- free public places and minimum unit pricing for alcohol.  Scotland now appears to have an opportunity to replace its tag as the ‘sick man of Europe’ with a new reputation for health policy innovation (e.g. Smith & Hellowell, 2012).
  • 6. Yet Policy Approaches to Health Inequalities Remain Remarkably Consistent Aspect of policy approach England Scotland How were health inequalities As health gaps resulting from As health gaps resulting from conceptualised? health deprivation. health deprivation. Commitment to joined-up Yes. Yes. approach? Reference to empirical Yes. Yes. evidence? Targets for reducing health Yes, specific health inequalities Yes, specific health inequalities inequalities? targets set in 2001, to be targets set in 2004, to be achieved by 2010. achieved by 2008/2010. How were targets articulated? To reduce health gaps (mainly To improve the health of the between areas). most deprived groups at a particular rate. Where was responsibility for Local NHS bodies (PCTs). Local NHS bodies (Local meeting health inequalities Health Boards). targets located?
  • 7. The absence of evidence-based policy in both contexts:  Senior academic researcher: ‘The research [on health inequalities] has had absolutely no, well, it’s had very little impact on policies,’  Civil servant (England): ‘My impression is that after about 2001, unfortunately the sheer pace and scale of action required of the Labour government meant that evidence again got pushed onto the back burner […] just because government was producing more policies than it had time to master the evidence on.’  Minister (Scotland): ‘I don’t think there’s very much evidence- based policy around yet.’ Taken from Smith, 2007, 2008.
  • 8. Comparing the evidence to policy responses for tackling health inequalities Idea(s) about health inequalities Are ideas are supported by Are ideas are evident in Labour’s policies? research evidence? Artefact and social selection No No Access to health services and Minimally Significantly (esp. from 2004 onwards) treatments Contextual (place-based) ideas Minimally Significantly (through area-based interventions) Need to change people’s lifestyle- L-Bs are linked to HIs but Significantly (throughout the past decade behaviours (L-Bs) are usually perceived to be but especially since 2004). symptomatic of more ‘upstream’ causes Material-structuralist Yes Significantly evident in policy rhetoric but far more limited with regards to policy actions Psychosocial and income Significant support References to social capital are evident but inequalities (although some criticisms) reference to income inequalities are absent Lifecourse approaches Yes A focus on particular social groups, especially children, is evident but ideas about the ‘lifecourse’ are scarce
  • 9. 1. Policymaking bodies as institutional filters
  • 10. How Policy Silos Shape the Relationship with Research Civil servant (Scotland): ‘People don’t go traipsing through professional journals but you do have specialists within the Department as well. So, for example, on diet and physical activity, there is a Diet Co-ordinator, and there is a Physical Activity Coordinator, who are specialists in their own right… and in addition to that, you have specialists in terms of doctors and things like, many of whom do actually spend a bit of time with the journals.’
  • 11. 2. A lack of belief in alternative ways of organising society
  • 12. A lack of belief in an alternative way of living Academic: ‘I think… a government that isn’t… keen to pursue issues around… income redistribution… you know, that’s a reasonably popular thing to not do. Who wants to pay more taxes? And… if taxes go up for the richest, somehow or other everybody seems to feel they’re being affected by it so, unless the government is prepared to tackle that at a media level, nobody’s going to be unhappy with their decision… not to change taxation.’
  • 13. 3. The lack of institutional memory within policy
  • 14. The Re-cycling of Ideas Academic: ‘What’s really struck me […] is we seem to do the same bits of work over and over again, you know? A demand will come for something and because… I don’t keep copies of these things, I think, ‘oh, I think we’ve done that before!’ And then somebody else will dig out… So on Monday, we’re doing a piece of work which I know we did two years ago… But… everybody’s changed so nobody knows that that’s what we did two years ago. […] [And] in the DH they’re now subcontracting a lot of their work… So… somebody, some agency will be given the job of coming up with something-or-other, and it’s like reinventing the wheel - they’ll have no knowledge of what the Department, or allied researchers, has already done. […] So I think that fragmentation, which you’ve got with the normal process of civil servants moving round is becoming intensified because of this process of giving the work to outsiders, who don’t even know what might have happened within the DH.’
  • 15. 4. Politicisation of the civil service
  • 16. Aiming to give ministers ‘what they want’ Civil servant (England): ‘If you’ve got a problem, […] the first thing you do is to work back in the files and see what you said last time and then to ask one another what you think we should do and then to make a judgement about what ministers really want, what’s feasible and what’s politically this, that and the other.’ [My emphasis] Former civil servant, Lord Bancroft: ‘seeing that advice which ministers want to hear falls with a joyous note on their ears, and advice which they need to hear falls on their ears with a rather dismal note, [civil servants] will tend to… make their advice what ministers want to hear rather than what they need to hear,’ (quoted in Hennessey 1995, p130).
  • 17. 5. Understanding the decisions health inequalities researchers make
  • 18. The importance of research funders: Senior academic researcher: ‘[A]cademics are entrepreneurial, they go where the money is and so […] if somebody says, ‘research project on X,’ you know, ‘cycling,’ we’d all start doing sociology of cycling or something, I don’t know [laughs].’ Senior academic: ‘[X - name of civil servant who is a personal friend of interviewee], is still amazed that I don’t know things like [policy] initiatives that are going on but then, can understand when I say, you know academics - we go on a need to know basis. […]. If there’s a call for research and there’s some funding, well, we’re learn about that, you know - in twenty-four hours we’ll know about that!’
  • 19. Intentional influences on research by funders?: Senior academic: ‘I think one of the difficulties is often when there are bids for research funding, it’s almost if the findings or, you know, the messages that are required are stated from the start almost. […] When one looks at research bids, it’s, there are strong steers in terms of what they’re looking for, what kinds of conclusions one’s being steered towards, what kinds of policy messages they want…’
  • 20. Intentional influences on research by funders: Senior policymaker (Scotland): ‘[T]here is a kind of tension in discussions which go on nowadays between… researchers, who basically say, ‘give us the money - I’ve got a great programme of research here… I can’t tell you too much about it, ‘cause the ideas are just beginning to… So, give me the money - you can trust me and… I’ll produce something. Don’t know what it is but, but something will happen.’ And on the other hand, people like me and […] my colleagues in the MRC, who say, ‘what did we buy for the money?’ And, ‘Well, I know you’re very interested in looking at… health inequalities but actually, I have a problem here - I am required to make policy in this area… at the moment, I have no hard facts at all… and I really would like some research done… and… by the way, I want it done within the next six months and I’ve got that amount of money available for it. So, I want you to give me the best answer you can within six months, given that amount of money.’ And that’s, that’s the real world.’
  • 21. The Need to Remain Optimistic  Most researchers I interviewed wanted to make a difference so many described increasingly focusing on things that they felt could make a small difference.
  • 22. 6. How researchers package messages to policymakers
  • 23. Deliberate Ambiguity: Academic: ‘When I was at [Blank] I could have been much more… critical. It isn’t simply that I feel the funding source wouldn’t like me to say those things, I actually… would feel it would be a betrayal of the trust that the people who gave me the opportunity to spend my time doing that had in me… and I think, in a way, when I was working at [this organisation] and they are actually funded through [government department], I think… they would have looked at me and said, ‘how can you not have read what is appropriate to say?’ So I think the censoring is actually self- imposed. […] It isn’t that I think they would come the heavy on me, it’s… there’s an unwritten understanding that I won’t rock the boat when I’m writing in that guise. So… at an academic event, I feel I’m me, you know […] I can be much more pointed in the points I want to make… but… I think when I’m writing through a funding source, which is government… and I do out of, and maybe I shouldn’t, I do it out of a sense of loyalty to… the people who are trusting me not to say things that would make them feel uncomfortable… and cast into doubt the judgement that they had in saying I was the right person to do the job.’
  • 24. Fitting in with perceptions of policy preferences Academic: ‘If you have poverty and adversity of that nature, nothing’s gonna save you. Now, they [policy makers] are not gonna like hear that. [Pause] On the other hand, I have to say, I think probably some people have enough clout that we don’t need to… be too tactful. But certainly when I was less experienced and I was putting in for money on [blanked] and health, we did produce papers which were - how can I put it? We weren’t coming out and saying we were absolutely sure that [blank] causes ill-health and there’s no element of selection. We actually found the perfect way through it, which was to say [removed for anonymity]. Now that, I think that’s probably true, actually, but… we were doing it, I was doing it, I was pushing people towards it in order to be clever.’
  • 25. References Bevan, G. (2010), Impact of devolution of healthcare in the UK: provider challenge in England and provider capture in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland? Journal of Health Services Research and Policy, 15(2): pp.67-68. Cairney, P. (2009), The role of ideas in policy transfer: the case of UK smoking bans since devolution. Journal of European Public Policy 16: pp.471-88. Connolly, S., Bevan, G. and Mays, N. (2010), Funding and Performance of Healthcare Systems in the Four Countries of the UK Before and After Devolution. London: The Nuffield Trust. Greer, S. (2005), The Territorial Bases of Health Policymaking in the UK after Devolution. Regional and Federal Studies 15: pp.501-18. Mackenbach, J.P. (2010) Has the English strategy to reduce health inequalities failed? Social Science & Medicine, 71:1249–53. Propper, C., Sutton, M., Whitnall, C. and Windmeijer, F. (2009), Incentives and Targets in Hospital Care: Evidence from a natural experiment. Working paper no. 08/205. London: University of Bristol. Smith, K.E., D.J. Hunter, T. Blackman, E. Elliott, A. Greene, B.E. Harrington, L. Marks, L. McKee, and G.H. Williams (2009), Divergence or convergence? Health inequalities and policy in a devolved Britain. Critical Social Policy 29: pp.216-242. Smith, K.E. & Hellowell, M. (2012) Beyond Rhetorical Difference: A cohesive account of post-devolution developments in UK health policy. Social Policy & Administration, 46(2): 178-198.