With record numbers out of work due to avoidable sickness, the
NHS under unsustainable strain and population health in the UK
behind other countries, the Prime Minister’s tobacco policy is a
bold first step. Tobacco is a leading cause of avoidable disease
and has a central role in driving health inequalities.
However, more is needed to make the UK
a world leader on health, including action on obesity, addiction,
gambling, alcohol and housing.
Chris Thomas, head of IPPR’s
Commission on Health and Prosperity,
said:
"The UK has lagged behind other
countries on public health this decade. Many lives and
livelihoods have been the price. So it’s entirely right that the
Prime Minister has proposed such bold, evidence-led action on
tobacco today - he should be congratulated on his
ambition.
“A coherent public health strategy
now demands similar ambition on obesity, gambling, alcohol and
housing in the coming months. Without that, the path to
prosperity looks ever fainter for the
UK."
IPPR’s Commission on Health
and Prosperity has shown:
-
Sickness explained more than half of
employment exits between 2014 and 2019, and even more
thereafter
-
The onset of sickness costs someone
up to £2,200 of their annual earned
income
-
Public health budget cuts are high,
particularly in the most deprived parts of the
country
-
Good population health could
contribute to significant NHS savings over the next
decade
To address this, IPPR has called for a
new Health and Prosperity Act – legislating for a long-term
health equivalent of net-zero, creating new institutions to drive
evidence and accountability, an investment bank to support
healthy business, and a health creation fund to help level up the
country’s health.