Maybe We Should Discuss the Political Determinants of Health

by James A. Bacon

As it takes up the issue of “social determinants of health,” the Joint Commission on Health Care is probing the social and economic origins of unequal health outcomes for different population groups in Virginia, according to Radio IQ.

By defining the issue as social determinants of health, as opposed to social correlates of health, the political left has already won the battle. The inevitable result will be pressure to increase state spending on programs asserted (but never proven) to ameliorate social inequities.

“There is a 20-year difference between the localities with the highest and lowest life expectancy rates in the state with Manassas Park at 89.3 years and Petersburg at 64.9 years,” said commission staffer Jen Piver-Renna yesterday when briefing the Commission.

“These are lifelong challenges people are facing: housing, health access, food access, crime, education,” Commission Chair Rodney Willet, D-Henrico, told Radio IQ.

Delegate Cia Price, D-Newport News drew the inevitable political conclusion: “If improving community conditions includes a healthy and safe place to live, we need to be thinking about that not just in this joint commission, but in general laws meetings too. There was redlining, underfunding, all of these things that have happened to communities which have caused these health issues.”

It is now established wisdom that group disparities in health outcomes, such as average life expectancy, are due mainly to environmental factors such as housing, education, crime and access to health care.

Proponents of the “social determinants of health” (SDH) paradigm contend that pointing to individual behaviors and beliefs — smoking, substance abuse, unsafe sex, poor diet, less impulse control, fatalistic attitudes about health, distrust of the healthcare system — amounts to “blaming the victim.” Such a view downplays policy initiatives that focus on changing individuals’ behavior.

The SDH paradigm also ignores the well-known “Hispanic paradox”: the fact that Hispanics, in defiance of social determinants that would predict worse health outcomes, have lower mortality rates than Whites. Remarkably, 40% of the population of Manassas Park, which the Commission identifies as having the longest life expectancy in Virginia, is Hispanic — a fact that never appeared in the Radio IQ article.

That’s not to say that social factors have no impact. It seems intuitively obvious that differential access to healthcare is an important variable. Based on the conviction that inadequate access to healthcare was harming the health of poor Virginians, the Commonwealth undertook a multibillion-dollar expansion of Medicaid in 2019. Over the past five years Virginia has conducted a real-world social experiment. Has Medicaid expansion made a difference?

I’ve found only one study by anyone willing to take a stab at answering the question. A 2022 study, “Effects of Virginia’s 2019 Medicaid Expansion on Health Insurance Coverage, Access to Care, and Health Status,” found that Medicaid expansion did improve lower-income Virginians’ access to healthcare but… showed “overall no discernible change in health status outcomes.”

That’s a remarkable finding, and it’s no surprise that the advocates of more government spending have ignored it. I suppose one can argue that it’s just one study and three years isn’t enough time to show measurable results, so it doesn’t count. Why, then, doesn’t the Joint Commission undertake a more authoritative study to find out if five years of Medicaid expansion has delivered on its promises? The reason, I expect, is (1) the political left fears the answers; and (2) the political right doesn’t have the wits to press the matter.

By defining social inequities as the “determinants” of health disparities, lawmakers are predisposed to address those inequities rather than do the hard work of identifying whatever deficiencies in the healthcare system that might exist — not enough primary care physicians, to pick an example — and crafting solutions to address them.

If we can’t document a tangible health benefit from Medicaid expansion, which attacks health-outcome inequities directly, how can we possibly demonstrate a benefit to housing or education initiatives where the theorized health impacts are far more tenuous?

One might hope that the Youngkin administration would ask the tough questions. But Team Glenn learned its lesson in 2022 when Colin Greene, the administration’s pick for Commissioner of Public Health, was tarred and feathered for questioning the dogma that racism has a significant impact on health outcomes in today’s healthcare system. He had the temerity to wonder if the racial disparity in maternal mortality rates could be explained in part by group differences in making it to medical appointments. Incensed by his insensitivity, General Assembly Democrats scuttled his nomination.

Back in the real world, if the political fixation on the “social determinants of health” creates a misallocation of public resources, we can be assured that it will only make health outcomes worse.


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29 responses to “Maybe We Should Discuss the Political Determinants of Health”

  1. walter smith Avatar
    walter smith

    "Back in the real world, if the political fixation on the “social determinants of health” creates a misallocation of public resources, we can be assured that it will only make health outcomes worse."

    1000%

    Just a scam for more power, more taxes, more authoritarianism from "the experts."

  2. Lefty665 Avatar
    Lefty665

    Of course you'd have to offset the quality of life decreases required to get the longevity increases from living in Manassas Park.

    1. how_it_works Avatar
      how_it_works

      Hearing my next-door-neighbor scream at her live-in boyfriend on a regular basis certainly had a negative impact on my quality of life. It's one of many reasons I don't live there anymore.

  3. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Indian River County, Fla. Even though the committee assigned to review and approve books for the school libraries had approved it for shelving in elementary and middle schools, the school board overruled the committee and banned “Ban This Book” from the school libraries.

    That’s right, they finally did it. They banned a book about book banning.

    “… ain’t got time to wonder why, whoopee, we’re all gonna die.”

  4. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Indian River County, Fla. Even though the committee assigned to review and approve books for the school libraries had approved it for shelving in elementary and middle schools, the school board overruled the committee and banned “Ban This Book” from the school libraries.

    That’s right, they finally did it. They banned a book about book banning.

    “… ain’t got time to wonder why, whoopee, we’re all gonna die.”

  5. Stephen Haner Avatar
    Stephen Haner

    I would be very interested in seeing data (untainted by politics) on the health impacts, if any, from the expansion of Medicaid coverage to all those additional people. But 1-2 years in is as that study was is way too soon to draw conclusions.

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Well, intuitively…

  6. how_it_works Avatar
    how_it_works

    Another possibility:

    Manassas Park has no:

    hospital
    jail
    long term care/nursing facility

    It's basically one big residential subdivision with some strip malls and some industrial. Anyone who died there likely died at work or at home.

    If someone from Manassas Park dies in the Prince William Hospital located in Manassas, does their death affect Manassas's stats or Manassas Park's?

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Good question. Whose traffic fatalities does a tourist from Germany killed in an accident in Orlando affect? Both?

      1. Marty Chapman Avatar
        Marty Chapman

        Florida's. I feel certain a death certificate from FL will be filed in Germany if the body is returned and copies will likely be needed for estate and life insurance purposes.

        1. Marty Chapman Avatar
          Marty Chapman

          This can get tricky where the accident occurs in say Arlington, but the victim is med flighted to DC, and dies there. DMV counts that as a fatal accident in VA, but the Death Certificate is on file in DC and the DC Dept of Vital records the death there.

  7. VirginiaGroyper Avatar
    VirginiaGroyper

    I’m not sure increased funding for Southside Regional Hospital will eliminate drive-by-shootings on Washington Street, but I’m sure we could advocate for an additional carve out.

  8. Carter Melton Avatar
    Carter Melton

    We spent a lot of time, energy, and resources on this issue once our hospital expanded its mission statement to include "building a healthier community". Rather than get into a lot of new businesses, we decided to partner with existing community organizations.

    Before committing to a project we insisted that the project had to identify metrics that were "meaningful and measurable"; that our partners had to have a viable business plan that would assure sustainability after the hospital's commitment was completed; and that there would be built-in feedback loops to fine tune or terminate the project based on success or lack of success.

    One of the things we learned early on, was that success in running the hospital….. and our reliance on "definitive" goals ie; man hours per patient day or cost per patient meal…. didn't work when trying to measure social pathology. So for our community outreach we decided to use "directional goals"…in other words was the needle moving in the desired direction rather that focusing on a numeric objective two places to the right of the decimal point.

    This actually worked pretty good, but you can't determine cause and effect using "directional" goals….only a correlation. Our two most successful programs (we think !) were "Marraige Before the Carraige" focused on reducing unwed teenage pregnancies, and "Hand-in-Hand" focused on reducing low birth weight babies of unmarried young women.

    In our projects, behavioral change was the name of the game.

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      ”… and biologists are happy when they get the sign right.”

  9. Carter Melton Avatar
    Carter Melton

    We spent a lot of time, energy, and resources on this issue once our hospital expanded its mission statement to include "building a healthier community". Rather than get into a lot of new businesses, we decided to partner with existing community organizations.

    Before committing to a project we insisted that the project had to identify metrics that were "meaningful and measurable"; that our partners had to have a viable business plan that would assure sustainability after the hospital's commitment was completed; and that there would be built-in feedback loops to fine tune or terminate the project based on success or lack of success.

    One of the things we learned early on, was that success in running the hospital….. and our reliance on "definitive" goals ie; man hours per patient day or cost per patient meal…. didn't work when trying to measure social pathology. So for our community outreach we decided to use "directional goals"…in other words was the needle moving in the desired direction rather that focusing on a numeric objective two places to the right of the decimal point.

    This actually worked pretty good, but you can't determine cause and effect using "directional" goals….only a correlation. Our two most successful programs (we think !) were "Marraige Before the Carraige" focused on reducing unwed teenage pregnancies, and "Hand-in-Hand" focused on reducing low birth weight babies of unmarried young women.

    In our projects, behavioral change was the name of the game.

  10. Eric the half a troll Avatar
    Eric the half a troll

    Is this an indicator of the “political determinants of health” in the US? https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/e7465a0896e0cd5a30a02579bffb6ba8e2e2cb800668aee1f16431cf8da25f34.jpg

    1. LarrytheG Avatar
      LarrytheG

      That's impressive and not in a good way for Virginia, given the life-expectancy in NoVa which is a substantial portion of Virginia by population.

      re: who really doesn't to know?

      The "left" DOES what to know AND they're willing to take action in response.

      The "right" simply does not want to know because once the data is known, they don't want to act on it , not unlike their attitude towards approving expansion of Medicaid to start with.

      Conservatives want to, e.g. blame smoking for deaths of low income while denying that medical treatment for higher income can and does reduce smoking.

      Bad habits cause early death – can access to good medical affect it? Not a hard answer, unless one would prefer to assign blame based on culture and race.

      Google thinks there already is quite a loft of data available… as opposed to there being little and some opposed to find out. It's there already in abundance.

      1. Eric the half a troll Avatar
        Eric the half a troll

        “…life-expectancy in NoVa which is a substantial portion of Virginia by population.”

        Indeed… this data demonstrates that:

        https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/da

  11. Eric the half a troll Avatar
    Eric the half a troll

    “The reason, I expect, is (1) the political left fears the answers; and (2) the political right doesn’t have the wits to press the matter.”

    Why does everything have to be viewed through a political zero-sum game filter? Can we not simply acknowledge that it is a good thing for everyone that many Virginians who did not have any health insurance in the past now have coverage…? Why is that so hard?

  12. Eric the half a troll Avatar
    Eric the half a troll

    “The reason, I expect, is (1) the political left fears the answers; and (2) the political right doesn’t have the wits to press the matter.”

    Why does everything have to be viewed through a political zero-sum game filter? Can we not simply acknowledge that it is a good thing for everyone that many Virginians who did not have any health insurance in the past now have coverage…? Why is that so hard?

    1. LarrytheG Avatar
      LarrytheG

      I have the very same question.

      If WE KNOW there ARE disparities – why not work to address them rather than essentially place blame and walk away?

      Is this a fundamental difference in politics and political ideology?

  13. DJRippert Avatar
    DJRippert

    Manassas Park?

    That's the example which shows that social or political issues affect healthcare which, in turn, affects longevity?

    And Manassas Park is the state-wide winner of the longevity lottery?

    Manassas Park is majority minority.

    27% White
    12% Black
    11% Asian
    45% Latino
    5% Other

    Petersburg also is majority minority

    15% White
    73% Black
    1% Asian
    6% Hispanic
    5% Other

    Both are relatively poor (vs cost of living), although Petersburg is poorer.

    Income … Family of 4, 2 adults working, 2 minor children

    Median Family Income … MP: $60,974
    P: $33,927
    "Living Wage" Required …MP: $35.28 (X2080) = $74,464
    P: $21.83 (X2080) = $45,406
    Median vs Living Wage …..MP: 82%
    P: 75%

    Age of population. Petersburg is much older.

    Percentage of population 65+ …. MP: 4.3%
    P: 15.6%

    I'm not sure how the longevity averages were calculated, but it seems to me that the biggest difference between the two localities is the average age and number of older people.

    1. LarrytheG Avatar
      LarrytheG

      don't you think they allow for them when they calculate longevity? Otherwise, it would be a pretty meaningless number, no?

      1. DJRippert Avatar
        DJRippert

        I don't know. The idea that Manassas Park has the longest life expectancy of any jurisdiction in Virginia seems odd to me. I would have expected a wealthier area like the City of Falls Church or Arlington.

        The outbreak of Covid may have impacted the statistic since older people had a much higher mortality rate.

      2. DJRippert Avatar
        DJRippert

        I don't know. The idea that Manassas Park has the longest life expectancy of any jurisdiction in Virginia seems odd to me. I would have expected a wealthier area like the City of Falls Church or Arlington.

        The outbreak of Covid may have impacted the statistic since older people had a much higher mortality rate.

    2. how_it_works Avatar
      how_it_works

      As I mentioned elsewhere, Manassas Park has no nursing homes or hospitals, two places where people often die.

      1. DJRippert Avatar
        DJRippert

        I saw that comment and I thought it was a well taken point. But if they only count people who die in the jurisdiction itself – that's a pretty lame statistic. It should be based on residents of Manassas Park, regardless of where they expire.

        From the internet (US in total, I believe): Life expectancy for Black people was only 70.8 years compared to 76.4 years for White people and 77.7 years for Hispanic people. It was highest for Asian people at 83.5 years and lowest for AIAN people who had a life expectancy of 65.2 years.

        Maybe Manassas Park's high percentage of Hispanics and relatively high percentage of Asians ve Petersburg tipped the scales.

        1. LarrytheG Avatar
          LarrytheG

          You have to adjust for demographic variations if you want to be able to do a valid comparison with other places, right?

        2. how_it_works Avatar
          how_it_works

          It could be Manassas Park’s high percentage of Hispanics, though I think most are working age. Would be interesting to see an ethnicity breakdown of the deaths in Manassas Park for the last 5 years.

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