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Review article: Politics, welfare regimes, and population health: controversies and evidence

Authors
Muntaner, CarlesBorrell, CarmeNg, EdwinChung, HaejooEspelt, AlbertRodriguez-Sanz, MaicaBenach, JoanO'Campo, Patricia
Issue Date
Sep-2011
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
population health; politics; political tradition; welfare state; democracy; globalisation
Citation
SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS, v.33, no.6, pp.946 - 964
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS
Volume
33
Number
6
Start Page
946
End Page
964
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/111730
DOI
10.1111/j.1467-9566.2011.01339.x
ISSN
0141-9889
Abstract
In recent years, a research area has emerged within social determinants of health that examines the role of politics, expressed as political traditions/parties and welfare state characteristics, on population health. To better understand and synthesise this growing body of evidence, the present literature review, informed by a political economy of health and welfare regimes framework, located 73 empirical and comparative studies on politics and health, meeting our inclusion criteria in three databases: PubMed (1948-), Sociological Abstracts (1953-), and ISI Web of Science (1900-). We identified two major research programmes, welfare regimes and democracy, and two emerging programmes, political tradition and globalisation. Primary findings include: (1) left and egalitarian political traditions on population health are the most salutary, consistent, and substantial; (2) the health impacts of advanced and liberal democracies are also positive and large; (3) welfare regime studies, primarily conducted among wealthy countries, find that social democratic regimes tend to fare best with absolute health outcomes yet consistently in terms of relative health inequalities; and (4) globalisation defined as dependency indicators such as trade, foreign investment, and national debt is negatively associated with population health. We end by discussing epistemological, theoretical, and methodological issues for consideration for future research.
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