Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - June 16, 2012, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A3
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TOP NEWS
WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, SATURDAY, JUNE 16, 2012
winnipegfreepress. com A 3
A WOMAN in a poor neighbourhood
such as Point Douglas will die, on
average, 16 years earlier than a
woman in a middle- class neighbourhood
like Richmond West.
Things are a little better for poor
men. Their lives are only 13 years
shorter than wealthier men.
That's one of hundreds of grim statistics
assembled in recent years by
the Manitoba Centre for Health Policy,
which, taken together, paint a bleak
picture of the huge health gap between
rich and poor in Manitoba.
Life expectancy is a bellwether, one
of the best and bluntest measures of
overall health. MCHP director Patricia
Martens frequently uses the figures
to illustrate just how stark Winnipeg's
health gap is.
She likens it to a bus ride up Pembina
Highway. For every couple of stops
closer to Winnipeg's downtown, a rider
loses a year of life. If the rider continues
north up Main Street, he gains
those years back.
To put the figures in perspective,
Martens says curing cancer would only
add three years to the average life expectancy
in North America. So, a 13- to
16- year difference between Winnipeggers
in rich and poor neighbourhoods
points to an extreme health disparity.
What makes Winnipeggers in neighbourhoods
such as William Whyte, Point
Douglas and Burrows die so young?
" It's not very satisfying, but the answer
is everything," said MCHP researcher
Randy Fransoo. " Whatever
is going around that's bad, the poor are
going to have more of it."
That means higher rates of chronic
diseases, more trips to the hospital and
even lower screening for breast cancer.
. In core neighbourhoods such as
William Whyte and Lord Selkirk Park,
more than a third of people have a mental
illness. In Fort Garry, the number
doesn't crack 20 per cent.
. Diabetes, among Manitoba's most
serious health threats, is nearly twice
as common in poor urban neighbourhoods
than in the wealthiest ones.
. The rate of teen pregnancies in the
inner city is seven times higher than in
the southern suburbs.
. Nearly half of all children who have
cavities so severe they need surgery
come from the poorest 20 per cent of
children. Fransoo says that stat makes
the hairs on the back of his neck stand
up.
But the news isn't all bad. In some
areas, such as breastfeeding, the gap
is closing, and the health of inner- city
neighbourhoods has improved in recent
years, just not as fast as in richer
neighbourhoods.
And, researchers have found creative
programs, such as the province's
Healthy Baby program, can nudge
health outcomes in the right direction.
The Healthy Baby program, which
gives poor, pregnant women an extra
$ 80 a month and some targeted support
before and after their baby is born, can
dramatically shrink premature births
and low birth weights and boost breastfeeding.
It was the extra cash, less than $ 3 a
day, that sparked the biggest improvement.
" We thought, ' It's a great idea, hopefully
it will help, but it's probably not
gonna change the world,' " said Fransoo.
" But, it did. It was just astounding."
maryagnes. welch@ freepress. mb. ca
MEASURING EQUALITY GAPS IN OUR CITY
BOTTOM LINES
AND DIVIDING LINES
What might make
poor kids healthier?
THAT'S the next big question
the Manitoba Centre for Health
Policy will try to answer.
The centre is one year into a
massive, five- year project that
will evaluate more than a dozen
child- health programs scattered
all over the province. Researchers
will study everything
from anti- bullying programs
and suicide- prevention projects
to prenatal and newborn- baby
outreach and many others.
The centre for health policy
has access to a data gold
mine - actual health files of
thousands of real patients,
minus any names and identifying
information. They can use
that data to see, for example,
how a baby who was part of a
specific prenatal program in
a rural health authority fared
later in life.
That's what researchers will
do for the dozen- plus programs,
allowing them to tell
which ones improved a child's
health over the long haul and
which ones government ought
to invest in or expand.
The idea is to close the huge
health gap between middleclass
kids and poor ones, to
" raise and level the bar," according
to the current catchphrase.
Prosper and live longer: stats
DIVIDED WE STAND / J1
Rich residents
tend to outlive
those in city's
poorer areas
By Mary Agnes Welch
3.69
2.62
6.49
7.91
4.28
2.49
3.42
2.24
2.53
Legend
Premature Mortality
1.86 - 3.07
3.08 - 4.28
4.29 - 5.49
5.50 - 6.70
6.71 - 7.91
Change in premature
mortality south- north
following Pembina Highway
( Route 42) and Main Street
( Route 52)
Bus trip up Pembina
Highway to downtown
Premature mortality rate
( death before age 75 per
1000 people):
South Pembina Highway:
Around 2 deaths per 1,000
Downtown:
6 to 8 deaths per 1,000
' It's not very satisfying, but the answer is everything. Whatever
is going around that's bad, the poor are going to have more of it'
- MCHP researcher Randy Fransoo, on what makes some poor people die so young
Point Douglas: life expectancy shorter
A_ 03_ Jun- 16- 12_ FP_ 01. indd A3 6/ 15/ 12 9: 33: 49 PM
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