A Blog About Health In Times Of Austerity

Posts tagged "Cost of Living"
Public Fears Of Getting Old: Is society making us scared of ageing?

Public Fears Of Getting Old: Is society making us scared of ageing?

We live in times of heightened societal fears of ageing. Ageing is seen as both a process and a state that we must vigilantly monitor and slow down, however, we cannot avoid it. Youthfulness, and its perceived vigour, are to... More…
Physician Associates: why the controversy?

Physician Associates: why the controversy?

Primary care workloads are a perennial concern in the NHS.  With problems recruiting and retaining GPs, policies to expand the skill mix are a usual mainstay of calls for improvement.  Plans to expand the Physician Associates (PA) workforce are one... More…
The fragile worker: stigma, illness and disability in the contemporary workplace

The fragile worker: stigma, illness and disability in the contemporary workplace

Fragility is a not a concept we explore often in relation to the workplace disability. When we use the word fragile we are often talking about objects; when it’s used in relation to people, we often mean the very old,... More…
Around a million children in the UK are living in destitution

Around a million children in the UK are living in destitution

Around a million children in the UK are living in destitution – with harmful consequences for their development. Millions of people in the UK are unable to meet their most basic physical needs: to stay warm, dry, clean and fed.... More…
The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse - one year on, what has changed?

The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse – one year on, what has changed?

Just over a year ago, at lunchtime on the 20th October 2022, UK news was dominated by the breaking story that Prime Minister Liz Truss had resigned with immediate effect. At the same time and only 2 miles away from... More…
Repeat child removals: structural inequality and iatrogenic harm

Repeat child removals: structural inequality and iatrogenic harm

One in four birth mothers who have a child taken into care in England will re-appear in care proceedings within seven years. Women in this situation have experienced structural disadvantage in multiple domains including socio-economic deprivation, histories of trauma and... More…
The two child benefit cap and the power of the financial markets

The two child benefit cap and the power of the financial markets

The two child benefit cap affects an estimated 1.5 million children across the country. Recent research suggests that as many as one in four children in some of England and Wales’s poorest constituencies are in families left at least £3,000... More…
Pandemic Preparedness, Recovery, and the Vital Role of Social Science

Pandemic Preparedness, Recovery, and the Vital Role of Social Science

As has become abundantly clear over the last few years, pandemics are social as well as biomedical. Their effects ripple through societies and communities, the result of – and further affecting – societal processes. Consequently, the social sciences have much... More…
What's worth remembering?

What’s worth remembering?

On the penultimate page of Rob Delaney’s grief memoir, we get a summary of the story so far: Our boy got sick We went to a lot of doctors, trying to find out what was wrong with him. We found... More…
Losing more than we ever had: The NHS staffing crisis, 4-year degrees and what will be lost

Losing more than we ever had: The NHS staffing crisis, 4-year degrees and what will be lost

We constantly hear that the NHS is in crisis. Most recently on the news agenda has been the NHS staffing crisis with a chronic lack of doctors, nurses, technicians and many areas of the NHS workforce. The Conservative government’s latest... More…
Rearticulating material inequalities as spatial inequalities (and how to stop it)

Rearticulating material inequalities as spatial inequalities (and how to stop it)

In order to assess the current policy approach to addressing inequalities, it is necessary to think critically about the ‘levelling up’ policy context in the UK. To do this, we need to think about changes to dominant ways in which... More…
“The Emperor’s New Clothes”: health inequalities in ethnic minority communities

“The Emperor’s New Clothes”: health inequalities in ethnic minority communities

The classic children’s story ‘The Emperor’s New Clothes’, catches the imagination with its allegory of logical fallacies and fear of and failure to criticise. Still, it is the way it classically embodies society’s seditious reticence, a state where everyone refuses... More…