Browne-Yung Kathryn, Ziersch Anna, Friel Sharon, Freeman Toby, Baum Fran
Flinders Health and Medical Research Institute, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia.
School of Regulation and Global Governance, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.
Health Promot J Austr. 2022 Jul;33(3):904-908. doi: 10.1002/hpja.564. Epub 2021 Dec 15.
Deindustrialisation and transitions from traditional manufacturing to new technologies and service industries in many high-income countries including Australia has resulted in rising employment insecurity, unemployment and increased income and health inequities. In this paper, we explore potential impacts of an automotive plant closure on health in a disadvantaged area of South Australia. Our aim was to examine how prevailing factors affecting social and health inequity might be further affected following the plant closure and to identify levers for potential policy responses.
In workshop discussions with 28 policy and 14 community stakeholders through an iterative process participants discussed how existing factors contributing to community social and health inequity might be worsened (or remediated) by the looming economic shock from the plant closure.
We identified eight key themes highlighted in the workshops. In particular local economic investment, availability of job opportunities, and appropriate training were identified as key factors influencing individual financial security, which was in turn linked to social and health impacts.
The pathways mapped between the plant closure and social and health equity impacts highlighted differential potential impacts on individuals and the community, and identified policy levers to reduce adverse health outcomes resulting from economic shocks such as the closure of a major employer. SO WHAT?: The study highlighted a broad range of intersecting factors affecting the health of the local community that policy responses to the plant closure needed to address to promote health and health equity. This included novel factors identified by community members, reinforcing the importance of including community perspectives when constructing policy responses.
包括澳大利亚在内的许多高收入国家,去工业化以及从传统制造业向新技术和服务业的转型导致就业不安全感上升、失业率上升,以及收入和健康不平等加剧。在本文中,我们探讨了一家汽车厂关闭对南澳大利亚一个弱势地区健康的潜在影响。我们的目的是研究工厂关闭后,影响社会和健康不平等的现有因素可能会受到怎样的进一步影响,并确定潜在政策应对措施的关键因素。
通过一个迭代过程,与28名政策制定者和14名社区利益相关者进行了研讨会讨论,参与者讨论了工厂关闭带来的迫在眉睫的经济冲击可能如何加剧(或补救)导致社区社会和健康不平等的现有因素。
我们确定了研讨会上突出的八个关键主题。特别是,当地经济投资、就业机会的可获得性和适当的培训被确定为影响个人财务安全的关键因素,而个人财务安全又与社会和健康影响相关联。
工厂关闭与社会和健康公平影响之间的路径突出了对个人和社区的不同潜在影响,并确定了政策杠杆,以减少主要雇主关闭等经济冲击导致的不良健康结果。那又如何?:该研究强调了一系列影响当地社区健康的相互交织的因素,对工厂关闭的政策应对措施需要解决这些因素以促进健康和健康公平。这包括社区成员确定的新因素,强化了在构建政策应对措施时纳入社区观点的重要性。