Our cities, our health, our future: Acting on social determinants for health equity in urban settings

Publication language
English
Pages
199pp
Date published
01 Jan 2008
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Health, Urban

 

This KNUS report summarizes the findings concerning structural and intermediate social determinants of health that are of importance in the urban setting. The framework of the Commission on Social Determinants of Health (CSDH) guided the work. While unmasking the health inequities and inequalities in urban settings, it was decided at an early stage to make a strategic focus on slums and informal settlements where one billion people
live in deplorable conditions. This number may double in coming decades unless appropriate policies for economic, social and health equity are developed and implemented. An example of the health inequalities in these circumstances is the strong gradient in infant and child mortality rates within Nairobi, Kenya, with rates in the slums more than three times
higher than the city average and possibly ten or more times higher than in the richer parts of the city. Other data from Africa shows that these mortality rates among the urban poor are, on average, almost as high as the rates among the rural poor, while among the richer urban groups the rates are the lowest.