The SDoH
Education
SES
'Environments'
Wildcard
100

A systematic framework showing the main determinants of the health of populations

The Dahlgren & Whitehead model (1991)

100

Two ways to measure education at population level

1.Achievement

2.Participation

100

What can socio-economic status include?

Education or Income or Employment

100

A multi-dimensional view of an 'environment' considers? 

Natural

Built

Social

100

Any factor that is directly associated with a change in health status.

Proximal or downstream determinant

200

The number of social determinants of health

No set list/number

200

The relationship between level of qualification and mortality at a population level

higher educational achievement eg. qualification, associated with lower mortality. 

A step-wise, education health gradient

200

A definition of socio-economic status

A measure of one’s combined economic and social circumstances

200

traffic calming measures are a feature of what aspect of our environment

built environment

200

The impact of the Preceed/Proceed Model on SDOH

Comprehensive assessment of social, environmental and behavioral factors of a community or population

300

A factor distant in either time or place from a change in health status

Distal or upstream determinant

300

A concept describing the two-way causal relationship between health and education

Reverse causality

300

Age, religion, nursing knowledge, literacy, cultural preferences

Factors that a nurse should include in a care plan
300

A pathway through which the social environment can impact health

Greater social cohesion = more trust = communities work together to improve environments = positive influences on health

300

Social Support, Economic Rewards, and Changing Social Norms

Reinforcing factors of the Preceed/Proceed Model

400

The relationship between structure and agency in health

Structure refers to the larger social determinants or circumstances that shape our everyday lives. The factors that determine or limit peoples’ ability to act/make decisions.

Agency is the capacity for individuals to act independently and to make their own free choices. 

Structures influence or determine agency 

400

The relationship between education, neighbourhoods and health

Greater education attainment increase purchasing power/access to material resources, which allows for access to healthier neighboorhood conditions - positive influences on health

400

The error of applying an area level measure to an individual

Ecological Fallacy

400

A pathway through which climate change could impact respiratory health outcomes in Aotearoa/NZ

increased rain, impacts on damp/cold housing, increases in asthma and other respiratory conditions

400

A reason why social inequalities are bad for societies

Countries with greater income inequality have lower life expectancy, higher infant mortality, poorer mental health outcomes etc.

500

The relationship between upstream and downstream determinants of health

Upstream determinants are those that occur at the macro level and include global forces, government policies and societal structures that influence health through impact on the downstream determinants, such as health behaviours or lifestyle factors

500

The relationship between education, health knowledge and disease management

Greater educational attainment creates opportunities for better health as people have stronger health knowledge, which supports more effective disease management/understanding of medical conditions.

500

The term used to describe the phenomenon whereby people who are less advantaged in terms of socioeconomic position have worse health (and shorter lives) than those who are more advantaged.

A social gradient in health

500

A pathway through which climate change can increase social inequity

Extreme weather, influences on food supply, impacts on prices and availability/cost of food

500
The relationship between SES, risk factors and health

lower SES, greater exposure to risk factors such as stress, poorer nutrition and road traffic accidents, contributes to poorer health outcomes across the life-course