Background
The health and wellbeing of children and youth in Australia has been well documented [
1‐
4], and reports concur that, while most are faring well, certain groups are disadvantaged by the failure of government policies and have poorer health, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander, out of home care, refugee, and disabled children and youth [
2,
4]. These differences in health status are known as health inequities which are understood as differences in health that are ‘systematically, and socially produced (and therefore modifiable) and unfair’ ([
5]: p.2]). For this study ‘equity groups’ are defined as groups of children who are known to be subject to social, economic, locational or cultural disadvantage and to experience worse health outcomes than non-members of that group.
The health inequities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous children and youth in Australia can be seen in infant mortality rates (7.2 and 4.2 per 1000 births respectively); child mortality rates (25 and 12 deaths per 100,000 respectively); developmental vulnerability (48 and 24 %); psychological distress for youth aged 18–24 (31 and 12 %) and suicide rates 15–24 years (33 and 10 deaths per 100,000) [
2,
3]. These inequities are comparable to those between Indigenous and non-Indigenous children in other developed countries [
6]. The health inequities between children of low economic status (LSES) and high economic status (HSES) can also be seen in developmental vulnerability (32 and 16 %); dental decay (53 and 33 %); and obesity rates (32 and 17 %) [
2].
A recent Australian Research Alliance of Children and Youth (ARACY)
Report Card 2013 on The Wellbeing of Young Australians found that overall Australia is ‘middle of the road’ and ranked in the top third for only 12 out of 46 indicators of child health and wellbeing when compared to other OECD countries [
3]. This evidence clearly demonstrates that Australian governments need to do more to improve child and youth health and reduce inequities in Australia. This study, although conducted in a high income country may offer lessons for those developing child health policies in low and middle income countries. The social determinants are vital to health in these settings.
There is a significant body of evidence that highlights the importance of addressing the social determinants of child and youth health to address these inequities [
7‐
9]. The social determinants of health that are specifically related to child and youth policy development can be broadly divided into the following categories: a) social and economic conditions—income/employment, adequate/affordable childcare and flexibility in the workplace for parents, affordable housing, parental educational levels, social connectedness, positive family relationships, and access to clean water and healthy food; b) early childhood development (ECD)—addressing the physical, social/emotional, and language/cognitive domains of development; c) education—primary, secondary and further education; d) healthy settings—urban planning, a safe local community, green space, playgrounds, childcare, schools, workplace; e) access to health services—availability, affordability, acceptability (organizational, social and cultural); f) socio-cultural conditions—gender, class, colonialism, environmental dispossession and culturally safe space (ie in health and education settings), racism and other forms of discrimination; and g) environmental, corporate and global forces—pollution/climate change, food production and the marketing of global corporations, media consumption and regulation, individualism and materialism [
3,
8‐
10].
Australian governments are therefore being called upon to devise policies that address the evidence on social determinants of health (SDH) [
11,
12]. The Final Report of the Commission on the Social Determinants of Health [
13], which was established by the World Health Organisation, and the Australian Senate endorsement of action on social determinants of health [
11] provide practical frameworks for translation of such evidence into policy action. While both documents indicate that cross-sector action is particularly effective at addressing the SDH, they strongly call on health departments to take a stewardship role. This involves showing leadership on the SDH both in the health department and with other sectors [
11,
13]. Furthermore, healthcare systems are in a key position to influence the health of children, youth and their parents [
8].
However, the process of translating evidence on the social determinants of health and health equity into effective health policy continues to challenge health departments and policy makers in Australia, and across the globe [
14‐
16].
There is broad agreement [
17] that public policy that aims to address the social determinants of health should adopt an ‘ecological view of health’, and be ‘multi-sectorial in scope’ and ‘collaborative in strategy’ [
18]. However, research suggests that policy developers face considerable barriers in this area including short electoral cycles [
19]; the need for extensive timelines/resources (life course approach) [
15]; the dominance of the medical profession and their influence over the health policy agenda [
20,
21]; a lack of convincing advocacy for a social determinants of health approach [
20]; a lack of two-way personal communication between the researcher and the policy maker [
22]; the logistics of essential cross sector collaboration [
20]; fiscal arguments with priority given to investment in health service delivery [
23]; a lack of consensus among academics and policy-makers about the sort of evidence and policy solutions required [
19]; differing world views held by dominant political parties [
24]; a lack of commitment to social justice [
25]; and a lack of political will [
26].
In order to understand the context in which this set of policies was developed it is important to recognise that governments in Australia operate in a neoliberal political environment. This ideology prioritizes free market economic goals over actions to reduce socioeconomic disadvantage, and promotes individual rather than collective responsibility for health [
27].
According to Baum [
28] there were some positive movements in improving health inequities through a strong community health movement in the 1970’s. Duckett argues that this was especially evident under the centre-left Australian Labor Party, which instituted a universal public health system in Australia, Medicare [
29]. However, Baum [
28] suggests that since the election of a conservative government in 1996, Australian politics has shifted to the political right, resulting in a reduction in policies that address the social determinants of health.
There has been no systematic analysis of Australian child and youth health policies with a social determinants and health equity focus and this paper aims to address this gap. In this article we report on a systematic analysis of seventeen Australian child/youth health policies and address the question:
To what extent do Australian child/youth policies set goals on the equitable improvement of child and youth health, and propose action on the social determinants of health?
Results
Table
3 provides an overview of the results from this study.
Health issues and targeted age group
This set of 17 policies covered the following range of health issues relating to children and youth: general health and well-being, obesity/overweight, nutrition, physical activity, sexual health/STIs, child protection, mental health, infant mortality, alcohol/tobacco/illicit drug use, oral health, and chronic disease prevention and management including in relation to diabetes and cancer.
A range of ages was covered from 0 to 25 years, but with a predominant focus on the 0–8 or 0–12 age groups. Although some policies stated that they addressed the health of 0–18 year olds, the focus remained on the 0–12 year olds with 12–18 year olds receiving limited attention. There were 6 policies dedicated to 0–8 year olds, one dedicated youth health policy and one policy that focused on families and communities. The remaining 9 policies stated that they addressed 0–18 age range, but most focused on the 0–12 age group. According to the UN ‘youth’ is defined as 15–24 years, and the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare defines ‘young people’ as 12–24 years. In this study, we found limited focus on the 12–18 year olds and very little focus on 18–24 year olds. More details of the policies are provided in Table
3.
Table 3
Overview of content of 17 Child Health Policies Reviewed (see attached file with table
3 in landscape format)
1 | Infant & child health | 0–8 | Population group (non-equity) | Significant audit and acknowledge | No | 1. Promote and Prevent (individualised) 2. Health services access | 46 | 1. Promote and Prevent (individualised) 2. Health services | 3 | 2 | ECD |
2 | Mental health | 0–2 | Population group (non-equity) | Significant audit and acknowledge | No | 1. Promote and Prevent (individualised) | 42 | 1. Cross sector 2. Health services 3. Health Workforce | 13 | 3 | ECD |
3 | Infant mortality | 0–2 | Population group (non-equity) | Minor acknowledge and audit | No | 1. Health services | 44 | 1. Health services 2. Health Workforce 3. Health services access | 7 | 0 | N/A |
4 | Family violence | 0–8 | Population group (equity) | Significant audit and acknowledge | No | 1. Health services 2. Cultural awareness 3. Promotion and Prevention (individualised) | 116 | 1. Health services 2. Promote and Prevent (individualised) 3. Health services access | 61 | 5 | Education |
5 | General health | 0–8 | Population group (non-equity) | Minor acknowledge | No | 1. Health services 2. Health service access | 81 | 1. Health services 2. Health workforce 3. Cross sector | 5 | 2 | ECD |
6 | Mental health | 0–18 | Population group (non-equity) | Minor acknowledge | No | 1. Health services 2. Health Services access | 24 | 1. Health services 2. Health service access 3. Health Policy | 11 | 1 | Housing |
7 | General Health | 0–18 | Population group (non-equity) | Significant audit and acknowledge | No | 1. Health services | 23 | 1. Health Services 2. Health workforce 3. Promote and Prevent (individualised) | 1 | 0 | N/A |
8 | General Health | 0–18 | Population group (non-equity) | Significant acknowledge | Yes | 1. Health services 2. Promotion and Prevention 3. SDH | 155 | 1. Promotion and Prevention 2. Health Services 3. SDH | 39 | 20 | ECD |
9 | General Health and education | 0–8 | Population group (non-equity) | Significant acknowledge and audit | No | 1. Cross sector 2. Health Services | 68 | 1. Cross sector 2. Promotion and Prevention (individualised) 3. SDH | 13 | 10 | ECD Education |
10 | Child friendly city | 0–12 | Population group (non-equity) | Extensive acknowledge and audit | No | 1. Policy and governamce 2. Community Engagement 3. Cross sector action | 284 | 1. SDH 2. Cross sector 3. Policy and governance | 59 | 70 | ECD Education Healthy Settings Housing Urban Planning Employment/workplace conditions |
11 | Physical, social and and emotional wellbeing | 12–24 | Population group (non-equity) | Extensive acknowledge and audit | No | 1. Health Services access 2. SDH 3. Health research | 45 | 1. Health service access 2. SDH 3. Health services | 3 | 7 | Healthy settings |
12 | Obesity Physical activity nutrition | 0–18 | Population group (non-equity) | Significant acknowledge and audit | No | 1. Promotion and Prevention (individualised) 2. SDH | 60 | 1. Promotion and Prevention (individualised) 2. SDH 3. Cross sector | 4 | 15 | Healthy Settings Urban Planning Regulation Public Transport |
13 | Child protection | 0–12 | Population group (non-equity) | Extensive acknowledge and audit | No | 1. SDH 2. Promotion and Prevention (individualised) 3. Health Services | 133 | 1. Policy and governance 2. Health Services 3. SDH | 60 | 22 | ECD Education |
14 | Sexual health | 12–18 | Population group (non-equity) | N/A | No | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
15 | Health Promotion and early child hood development | 0–12 | Population group (non-equity) | Acknowledge and audit | No | N/A | 11 | 1. Promotion and Prevention (individualised) 2. Policy and governance 3. SDH | 0 | 1 | Healthy Settings |
16 | Health Promotion | 0–3 | Population group (non-equity) | Extensive acknowledge and audit | Yes | N/A | 48 | 1. Promotion and Prevention (individualised) 2. Health Services 3. Health service access | 13 | 5 | Education Healthy Settings Urban Planning |
17 | General Health | 0–8 | Population group (non-equity) | Minor acknowledge | No | N/A | 71 | 1. Promotion and Prevention (individualised) 2. Health workforce 3. Health Services | 8 | 14 | ECD Healthy Settings |
Goals
We identified whether the goals of policies suggested improvements in overall child/youth/family health, or in equity or disease based groups. The majority of goals (10) were aimed at the general population group ie children or youth. For example: ‘improve the health and well being of our children’ (ACT Children’s Plan) or ‘all children in Tasmania have the best start in life’ (TAS Child Health & Parenting Service—Strategic Plan). Three policies identified health goals for equity or disease groups. For example: ‘that all Aboriginal people in NSW live safe and healthy lives free of domestic violence’ (NSW Aboriginal Family Health Strategy).
Four policies identified goal to improve the family environment in some way. An example would be ‘to engage all families with newborns and to provide support to parents with young children’ (NSW Supporting families early—SAFE START Strategic Policy).
Acknowledging or auditing evidence on the SDH
As described above, we identified acknowledgement of evidence on the social determinants of health when a simple statement about the evidence was made; and auditing of evidence when specific evidence was described and/or explained in more depth [
35].
All policies acknowledged evidence on the social determinants of health and health equity, although the extent to which they did so varied widely. Across all seventeen policies there were 146 items coded as acknowledging and 98 coded as auditing the social determinants of health and health equity.
For example:
Acknowledging the social determinants of health:
‘NSW Health is strongly committed to basing its services, programs and responses to young people on a holistic understanding of young people’s health and wellbeing. This means recognising the range of socio-economic and environmental factors that have an impact on young peoples wellbeing’ (NSW Youth Health Policy).
Auditing the social determinants of health and health equity:
‘The government recognises the importance of ensuring Aboriginal families and children have access to safe, affordable and appropriate housing, noting that one third of Aboriginal households in NSW live in social housing compared to 6% of the non-Aboriginal population. Aboriginal people face multiple barriers in the private rental market and most of this housing is unaffordable or unsuitable to meet the needs of large Aboriginal families’ (NSW Keep them safe: a shared approach to child wellbeing).
The social gradient
Much research has stressed that health inequities occur as a gradient [
5,
13,
37]. Two policies acknowledged this evidence including the SA Primary Prevention Plan and the WA Our children our future: A framework for Child and Youth Health Services.
For example:
‘What is now more apparent is the potential contribution of early life experiences and opportunities to reducing health inequalities across the life course. To have an impact on health inequalities we need to address the social gradient in children’s access to positive early experiences. Later interventions, although important, are considerably less effective if they have not had good early foundations’ (SA Primary Prevention Plan—section on early childhood).
‘It is important however to recognise that inequalities in health extend across the whole of society, with those at the top of the socioeconomic gradient having the highest level of health, with decreasing health outcomes experienced across the whole of the population, and those at the bottom having the poorest level of health’ (WA Our Children Our Future: A framework for Child and Youth Health Services).
Objectives
In all policies, we identified 172 objectives of which over half (91) were related to health services, followed by policy and governance (23), social determinants of health (19), promotion and prevention (18). The numbers here refer to the number of objectives, drawn from all the policies, coded under each category. Table
4 illustrates some of the phrases coded under each category:
Table 4
Examples of phrases coded under Objectives for each category
Health Services |
‘Improve child and youth health and wellbeing through the early diagnosis, acute care and ongoing treatment of current key health issues’ WA Our children our future: A framework for Child and Youth Health Services 2008–2012 |
Policy & Governance |
‘The Government and non government sector will build the capacity across the ACT to advocate, promote and protect children’s rights’ ACT Children’s Plan: Vision and building blocks for a child─friendly city 2010–2014 |
Social determinants of health |
‘Early years services must be relatively accessible to all and include strategies to overcome barriers eg. socio-economic disadvantage, cultural and language barriers, access to services in remote areas’ TAS Child Health & Parenting Service (CHAPS)-Strategic Plan 2009–2014 |
Promotion and Prevention |
‘Improve child and youth health and wellbeing by encouraging self-management and addressing key health-related and risk-taking behaviours’ WA Our children our future: A framework for Child and Youth Health Services 2008–2012 |
Strategies
We found a total of 1478 strategies of which around a third were related to health service delivery (469) followed by (individualized) promotion and prevention (278), health policy/governance (197), cross sector strategies (177) and social determinants of health (173). Table
5 illustrates some of the phrases coded under each category:
Table 5
Examples of phrases coded under Strategies for each category
Health service delivery (service improvement; access) |
‘planning for the development of the new Women’s and Children’s hospital’ ACT Children’s Plan: Vision and building blocks for a child-friendly city 2010–2014 |
‘provide intensive mobile youth outreach services for high risk adolescent clients who are difficult to engage and need intensive case management outreach and support’ VIC CAMHS in communities 2006 |
Promotion and prevention |
‘provide a tailored community education and social marketing initiative that engages parents, families and the broader community in preventative health’ Victorian (VIC) Public Health and Well Being Plan 2011–2015 |
Health policy/governance |
‘establish the appropriate governance arrangements to support a collaborative approach to implementing the (child health) agenda’ TAS Our Children Our Future 2011–2021 |
Cross sector strategies |
‘(develop) partnerships between Child, Youth and Women’s health programs and Family Centres for the provision of maternal and child health services within the centres (ACT Health & DHCS)’ ACT Children’s Plan: Vision and building blocks for a child-friendly city 2010–2014 |
Social determinants of health |
‘support healthy food and fresh produce initiatives as part of community regeneration in social housing areas’ NSW Governments Plan for Preventing Overweight & Obesity in Children, Young people & their Families 2009–2011 |
Social determinants of health
With only just over 10 % of strategies coded as relevant to the social determinants of health it is clear that the policies proposed relatively little action on the social determinants of child and youth health. However, as the social determinants of health are the focus of this research the strategies identified under this code were further divided into sub-categories (see Table
2) to enable more detailed exploration of how the social determinants of child and youth health were addressed.
We found 68 examples of strategies addressing early childhood development (ECD). Action in this area centered on the home environment and/or government or community services designed to foster early childhood development.
Strategies focused on the home environment often referred to mental health screening or surveillance of mothers and children, or the need to provide extra support where the capacity of the mother was ‘diminished’. For example: ‘provide mental health screening for all mothers’; ‘influence mothers wellbeing through post-natal depression screening and intervention programs’; ‘identify where a parent or carer’s capacity may be diminished, and their ability to meet the needs of their children may be compromised and they may require additional support’.
Strategies on the home environment also included services or health promotion activities designed to improve parenting skills or help parents make healthy choices for their children by providing them with information. In addition, fathers were mentioned only 8 times with most sections of text describing the father in a supportive rather than an active role.
For example: ‘SAFE START acknowledges….the vital role of support systems, especially fathers or partners’. There were two mentions of supporting fathers with mental illness and two mentions of the ‘absence’ or ‘violence’ of the father.
Two sections of texts acknowledged the importance of fathers:
‘Fathers are more likely, than in previous generations, to be actively engaged in parenting. Growing numbers of fathers visit child health sites with their child and express interest in parenting groups. Some fathers have sole custody of their child/ren’ (TAS Child Health & Parenting Service (CHAPS)—Strategic Plan 2009–2014).
‘In contrast, young men were more likely than young women to confide in their father (40 % vs 27 %) or a male friend (41 % vs 31 %) for advice regarding sexual health’ (NT Guidelines on the Management of Sexual Health Issues in Children and Young People 2011).
ECD strategies focused on Government or community services referred mostly to increasing the quantity, quality or targeting of ECD programs in the community. For example: ‘work with targeted communities, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander’s to promote and deliver early childhood programs’; ‘Development of four early childhood schools’; ‘provide early literacy programs in libraries’; ‘Implementation of 12 h week for ACT preschoolers’; ‘Fund an additional 10,500 places to ensure a quality preschool program is available for all 4 year olds’; ‘increase ratio of carers to children in long day care services to one carer for every four children under 2’.
We found some action related to education (34), mostly in regard to primary or secondary schooling with very few related to the transition to tertiary studies. Strategies on education referred to providing better quality education and/or keeping young people at school for longer. For example: ‘Provide quality education for all children’; ‘raise school leaving age to ensure all NSW students have improved opportunities’; ‘increase the number of Aboriginal student liaison officers to work with an expanded number of Aboriginal communities to develop locally identified solutions to the non-attendance of Aboriginal students and to improve their connection to education’; ‘support young people to attain a year 12 qualification or equivalent’.
There was also a focus on creating healthy settings (26). Half of these strategies referred to individualised health promotion activities within schools. For example, ‘The government will support primary and secondary students’ participation in physical activity and reduced sedentary behavior through the implementation of the Premier’s Sporting Challenge’. The other strategies coded under healthy settings were focussed on recreation or sporting clubs; mainly promoting health eating options at sporting events, encouraging children and youth to participate in sport, or supporting the development of open spaces and parks where children and youth can play sport. For example ‘ensure participation in sport and recreation by all children’; ‘ensure quality places to play through the provision of public sports grounds, open spaces, pools and sport specific facilities’; ‘work with Sport and Recreation Services to scope and plan implementation of guidelines for junior sporting clubs canteens’. There were two sections of text coded under playgrounds or open spaces and gardens (not related to organized sport and recreation). For example: Construction of a sensory play space and garden in O’Connor.
There was one strategy that suggested addressing the broader determinants in a
healthy setting context by supporting access to fresh fruit and vegetables in local communities:
‘support healthy food and fresh produce initiatives as part of community regeneration in social housing areas’. (NSW Governments Plan for Preventing Overweight & Obesity in Children, Young people & their Families).
The social determinants of health addressed least in coded strategies were some of the more structural determinants that are known to have an impact on reducing health inequities, and relate to the broader context in which children and youth play, live and learn. These strategies focussed on employment/workplace conditions or flexibility for parents (15); housing (12); urban planning (6); and public transport (3).
Finally regulation was mentioned only 9 times in the 17 policies, with most strategies relating to corporate self-regulation of food labeling and junk food advertising to children. The following quote represents a rare statement that suggests direct regulatory action.
‘The NSW Government, working with Local Government, will have objectives and measures included in land use planning strategies and policies to support access to fresh foods in local communities. This will involve provisions in planning instruments to protect and maintain significant local food production and agricultural activity’ (NSW Governments Plan for Preventing Overweight & Obesity in Children, Young people & their Families).
Recognition of health inequities in the intended outcomes of strategies
We coded 1067 instances of the intended health outcome of strategies. We found just over half (605) were directed toward children in general, about a third toward equity groups of children (305), and most of the remaining strategies toward improving average health (not specifically relating to children or youth, but the whole population) (132). A small number of strategies were coded as intended to close a health gap, and most of these related to the inequitable health outcomes between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians (21). Closing the gap is a strategy, endorsed by the Australian government in 2008, that aims to reduce Indigenous disadvantage with respect to life expectancy, child mortality, access to early childhood education, educational achievement, and employment outcomes in 25 years.
The equity groups recognised most in coding across the strategies in policies were Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children and children in out-of-home-care and/or the child protection system. Other equity groups that were recognized, though only rarely were children with a disability, culturally & linguistically diverse children, children of teenage parents, children living in rural/remote areas, and refugee children.
Strengths and limitations
The main limitation for this study is that only health department policies were included. We recognise that the policies of other departments will have a significant effect on child health and well-being however the scope of this study was restricted to health sector policies in order to specifically assess action on the social determinants of child and youth health in that sector. Research within other sectors is planned. Also, the selection process was not able to include several potentially relevant policies still under development at the time the study was conducted. A major strength of the study is that it included all strategic health policies relating to children and young people in the period 2008–13.
Discussion
The analysis of this set of policies shows that Australian child and youth health policies are addressing a wide range of health issues for children (0–12) and to a lesser extent youth (12–25). The policy solutions being proposed, however predominantly lie in health services provision or health service access, with the broader social determinants of health playing a limited role. Whilst there are some exceptions, for example, ACT Children’s Plan, when a social determinants approach is adopted there is a tendency to take a narrow view of the evidence or to acknowledge the evidence then fall back on a medical or behavioural strategy.
An example of this is the manner in which some early childhood strategies (ECD) conveyed a narrow view of the evidence about the home environment by focusing mainly on the mother’s mental health. In doing so policies tended to take a biomedical approach to this issue, opting for mostly screening and surveillance strategies, and did not adequately addressing the other important determinants of health that are known to improve the home environment such as adequate and affordable housing, income support and social connectedness [
38].
This critique has been raised before with a recent study on infant mental health finding that ‘although there is recognition that the broader social context plays an important role in early childhood development, the problematisation of mothering as risk shifts the focus to the individuals capacity to promote healthy attachment and development rather than a focus which encompasses systems and social conditions that support healthy relationships’ ([
39]: p.107).
In this way, there appears to be elements of victim blaming, placing the responsibility of raising a child in the hands of the mother alone. Keleher and Reiger [
40] in their review of child health policy in Victoria also found ‘tensions’ between a medical ‘surveillance’ of mothers and children and a social determinants approach, with the former dominating.
In addition, as we analysed the policies we found a policy silence in relation to fathers, who were rarely mentioned. If fathers were mentioned it was in regard to a supportive role rather than a central role, with some mention of father’s mental health and only a few instances where fathers were seen as vital to parenting. Lawless also found in her study on infant mental health that ‘beyond a ‘fathers are important’ stance, there is little discussion of how father figures can support infant mental health and healthy children more generally’ ([
39]: p.106]).
The policies that focus on healthy settings showed promise of moving towards a social determinants of health approach, but, at the action end of the policy they tended to opt for social marketing and educational health promotion activities, thus focusing on individual behavior change rather than broader social change. While the Ottawa Charter [
41] has long advocated for a healthy settings approach, the evidence around this approach has translated into differing levels of action in policy and health promotion activities. Whitelaw has categorised these responses into passive, active, vehicle and organic models [
42]. Our analysis suggests that in terms of Whitelaw’s [
42] categories, the majority of healthy setting models assessed in this study fit into his passive model moving towards an active model, meaning that they either use traditional means of education to deliver an individualized health promotion message to a captive audience (such as schools) or that they take a slightly broader view and try and adjust the environment to encourage the person to change their behavior. The exception within this study is the ACT Children’s Plan, which could be categorised under the active model with elements of the organic model where the policy focuses on the health and wellbeing of children at a broader determinants level, implying that the health and wellbeing of children will be better if the environment and daily conditions in which they live are improved.
Although it is difficult to gain insight into why there is such a limited emphasis on the social determinants of child and youth health through the analysis of these policies the findings of this research suggest that the social environment with which children and youth live is either currently considered outside the scope of health departments, or is not a priority.
Conclusion
In conclusion, all Australian child/youth health policies address health inequities to some extent, with the best examples being in Aboriginal or child protection policies, along with whole of government policies with strong links to the health department. There appears, however, to be limited action on the social determinants of child and youth health within Australian health departments; whilst all policies acknowledged or audited the evidence on the social determinants of health at the beginning of the policy, only 10 % of strategies committed to action in this area. With some exceptions, upon closer examination the strategies that initially appeared to be addressing important social determinants of health, such as early childhood development and healthy settings, often resulted in narrow strategies that drifted back to focus on the individual.
Most strategies coded in this study were concerned with improving health service delivery and access. Although there is some focus on promotion and prevention, most of the strategies identified reflect the dominant medical or (individualised) behavioural models of health. Whilst access to healthcare is as an important determinant of child and youth health, we argue that health departments should not limit the ‘scope’ of their actions on the social determinants of health to this strategy alone, but broaden their scope to include work with other sectors to address the more structural determinants of health that are known to reduce child and youth health inequities.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the 3-year Australian Research Council Discovery research project on Social Determinants of Health and Health Equity in Australian Health Policy-DP120101510.