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Health and social inequalities in Turkey

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  • Dedeoglu, Necati

Abstract

Social and economic policies of governments directly influence the health of the people. These policies, in turn, are determined by the national and foreign controllers of power. Economic and social factors in Turkey during the late 1970s led to a new modelling of the economic system, from a Keynesian to a market-oriented and monetarist model. The state mechanism was also altered to form a centralized. authoritarian regime in order to enforce the requirements of the economy. As a result, the middle class diminished in size, inequalities in income distribution increased, unemployment climbed, the purchasing power of wage earners decreased, government spending for education and health was cut and new oppressive laws were enacted. Health services were already urban-biased and hospital-oriented, but new free-market measures were instituted which promoted private health institutions and attempted to transform state-owned and financed hospitals into self-supporting, independent business enterprises. The only school of public health was closed down; preventive medicine expenditures were lowered while hospital rates and drug prices were increased. All these changes affected the health status of the population. Mortality and morbidity inequalities had already existed between the rich and the poor, men and women, urban and rural settlements, educated and illiterate, West and East, always in favour of the former. However, the new policies exacerbated the inequalities. Infectious diseases including tuberculosis increased, nutrition worsened, occupational diseases and work accidents rose to be the highest in Europe. The power-holding minority is not interested in the health of populations and is committed to pursue its social and economic policies. Ad hoc research, especially cross-sectional mortality studies repeated at regular intervals can provide data on the most vulnerable groups as no other valid information exists. There is little hope of these data being used for intervention unless democratic changes take place.

Suggested Citation

  • Dedeoglu, Necati, 1990. "Health and social inequalities in Turkey," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 31(3), pages 387-392, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:socmed:v:31:y:1990:i:3:p:387-392
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    Cited by:

    1. Vedia Dokmeci, 2002. "Spatial Analysis of Physicians' Offices with Respect to Population and Hospital Beds in Istanbul," European Planning Studies, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 10(3), pages 405-412, April.

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