Abstract

BackgroundMany low- and middle-income countries are experiencing an epidemiological transition from communicable to non-communicable diseases. This has negative consequences for their human capital development, and imposes a growing economic burden on their societies. While the prevalence of such diseases varies with socioeconomic status, the inequalities can be exacerbated by adopted lifestyles of individuals. Evidence suggests that lifestyle factors may explain the income-related inequality in self-reported health. Self-reported health is a subjective evaluation of people’s general health status rather than an objective measure of lifestyle-related ill-health.MethodThe objective of this paper is to expand the literature by examining the contribution of smoking and alcohol consumption to health inequalities, incorporating more objective measures of health, that are directly associated with these lifestyle practices. We used the National Income Dynamic Study panel data for South Africa. The corrected concentration index is used to measure inequalities in health outcomes. We use a decomposition technique to identify the contribution of smoking and alcohol use to inequalities in health.ResultsWe find significant smoking-related and income-related inequalities in both self-reported and lifestyle-related ill-health. The results suggest that smoking and alcohol use contribute positively to income-related inequality in health. Smoking participation accounts for up to 7.35% of all measured inequality in health and 3.11% of the inequality in self-reported health. The estimates are generally higher for all measured inequality in health (up to 14.67%) when smoking duration is considered. Alcohol consumption accounts for 27.83% of all measured inequality in health and 3.63% of the inequality in self-reported health.ConclusionThis study provides evidence that inequalities in both self-reported and lifestyle-related ill-health are highly prevalent within smokers and the poor. These inequalities need to be explicitly addressed in future programme planning to reduce health inequalities in South Africa. We suggest that policies that can influence poor individuals to reduce tobacco consumption and harmful alcohol use will improve their health and reduce health inequalities.

Highlights

  • Many low- and middle-income countries are experiencing an epidemiological transition from communicable to non-communicable diseases

  • The results suggest that smoking and alcohol use contribute positively to income-related inequality in health

  • Alcohol consumption accounts for 27.83% of all measured inequality in health and 3.63% of the inequality in self-reported health

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Summary

Introduction

Many low- and middle-income countries are experiencing an epidemiological transition from communicable to non-communicable diseases. Self-reported health is a subjective evaluation of people’s general health status rather than an objective measure of lifestyle-related illhealth. A number of studies have examined the effects and contributions of lifestyle factors such as tobacco use, harmful use of alcohol and obesity on income-related inequalities in health [4, 45]. Evidence from these studies has been important for the formulation of anti-smoking and alcohol policies. This paper expands the analysis of the contributions of smoking and alcohol consumption to income-related inequality in health by incorporating more objective measures of health that are directly associated to these lifestyle practices. It should be noted that self-reported health and self-assessed health are used interchangeably in this paper

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