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,โ said commission staffer Jen Piver-Renna yesterday when briefing the Commission.
โThese are lifelong challenges people are facing: housing, health access, food access, crime, education,โ Commission Chair Rodney Willet, D-Henrico, told Radio IQ.
Delegate Cia Price, D-Newport News drew the inevitable political conclusion: โIf 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.โ (more…)

by Dick Hall-Sizemore







by Dick Hall-Sizemore

