Welfare benefits’ screening and referral: a new direction for community nurses?
- 1 November 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Hindawi Limited in Health & Social Care in the Community
- Vol. 8 (6) , 390-397
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2524.2000.00264.x
Abstract
The White Paper, Towards a Healthier Scotland considerably widens the community nursing scope for health promotion, as it recognises that disadvantaged life circumstances as well as unhealthy lifestyles contribute to poor health. It has been shown that income and health are interrelated. This evidence has demonstrated that it is not how rich a nation is that determines the overall health of its inhabitants; it is how equitably its wealth is distributed that counts: countries that have narrow income differentials tend to have better health. Both the income and health divide in Britain widened considerably between 1980 and 1992. It is argued that increasing income inequality leads to social isolation and chronic stress, which can impact on psycho-social pathways and damages life expectancy. This paper suggests that community nurses can address adverse life circumstances by finding ways of improving the economic status of their most vulnerable clients, and that one way of doing this would be to ensure that clients claim their full quota of welfare entitlement, given that there is several billion pounds of social security benefits that remain unclaimed in Britain every year.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Providing welfare rights advice in primary carePublic Health, 1999
- Does the variation in the socioeconomic characteristics of an area affect mortality?BMJ, 1996
- Income distribution and mortality: cross sectional ecological study of the Robin Hood index in the United StatesBMJ, 1996
- Inequality in income and mortality in the United States: analysis of mortality and potential pathwaysBMJ, 1996
- Deprivation and mortality in Glasgow: changes from 1980 to 1992BMJ, 1994
- Citizens' advice in general practice.BMJ, 1993
- Death rate from asthma.BMJ, 1993
- Income Distribution and Infant MortalityThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1992
- Doctors and benefits.BMJ, 1990
- Inequality of income, illiteracy and medical care as determinants of infant mortality in underdeveloped countriesPopulation Studies, 1982