Factors Related to Human Health
Social, Political and Economic Determinants
There is growing recognition that there are many social determinants of health. To fully understand the impact on health we must recognize a persons character and environment. The WHO categorizes these determinates as Structural and Intermediary. Structural determinants refers to socioeconomic and political context such as governance, polices and values which lead to an unequal distribution of material and monetary resources, changing their socioeconomic position. Intermediary determinants are material circumstances such as work and home environment, as well as psychological and behavioral factors. Social cohesion and social capital bridge the gap between structural and intermediary determinants. They describe the willingness of people in a community to cooperate for the greater good.
Around 1830, a french physician named Louis Villerme correlated morality by the district in Paris. The result showed a correlation between death and the rate of poverty in the district. The Whitehall study was a prospective cohort study which studied mortality in British civil servants in 1967. The result showed at each occupational grade, health status was higher and mortality was lower. This is apparent in most industrialized countries, but the inverse was true in developing countries. In Nigeria, for example, obesity is found more commonly in the upper classes.