Abstract

ObjectivesThe public health sector has long recognized the role of the social determinants of health in health disparities and the importance of achieving health equity. We now appear to be at an inflection point, as we hear increasing demands to dismantle structures that have perpetuated inequalities. Assessing prevailing mindsets about what causes health inequalities and the value of health equity is critical to addressing larger issues of inequity, including racial inequity and other dimensions. Using data from a nationally representative sample of adults in the United States, we examined the factors that Americans think drive health outcomes and their beliefs about the importance of health equity.MethodsUsing data from the 2018 National Survey of Health Attitudes, we conducted factor analyses of 21 survey items and identified three factors from items relating to health drivers—traditional health influencers (THI), social determinants of health (SDoH), and sense of community health (SoC). Health equity beliefs were measured with three questions about opportunities to be healthy. Latent class analysis identified four groups with similar patterns of response. Factor mixture modeling combined factor structure and latent class analysis into one model. We conducted three logistic regressions using latent classes and demographics as predictors and the three equity beliefs as dependent variables.ResultsNearly 90% of respondents comprised one class that was characterized by high endorsement (i.e., rating the driver as having strong effect on health) of THI, but lower endorsement of SDoH and SoC. Logistic regressions showed that respondents endorsing (i.e., rated it as a top priority) all three health equity beliefs tended to be female, older, Black or Hispanic, more educated, and have lower incomes. The class of respondents that endorsed SDoH the most was more likely to endorse all three equity beliefs.ConclusionsResults suggested that people historically impacted by inequity, e.g., people of color and people with low incomes, had the most comprehensive understanding of the drivers of health and the value of equity. However, dominant beliefs about SDoH and health equity are still generally not aligned with scientific consensus and the prevailing narrative in the public health community.

Highlights

  • In 2008 the WHO Commission on the Social Determinants of Health called reducing health inequities an “ethical imperative” [1]

  • Dominant beliefs about social determinants of health (SDoH) and health equity are still generally not aligned with scientific consensus and the prevailing narrative in the public health community

  • Study aims This paper contributes to our understanding of the American mindset around social determinants of health and health equity with recent data from the 2018 National Survey of Health Attitudes (NSHA) [24], a survey developed and fielded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) and the RAND Corporation, to address two aims: 1. To examine what factors people in the U.S think drive health, whether and how levels of understanding vary, and how these levels of understanding may differ by demographic characteristics

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Summary

Introduction

In 2008 the WHO Commission on the Social Determinants of Health called reducing health inequities an “ethical imperative” [1]. Prior to the events of 2020, equity concerns had been a focus of some health departments, mayor’s offices, philanthropies, and an explicit goal of the U.S public health community for over a decade [4]. This focus emerged from persistently poor health outcomes disproportionately affecting low-income people and people of color [5, 6], and entrenched negative influences on health in some communities that can compound over generations. Within racial/ethnic groups, lower income people are more likely than higher income people to lack access to care and have poorer self-reported general health [5]

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