In the UK, 50% of people in the most deprived areas report poor health by age 55–59, over two decades earlier than those in the least deprived areas. Health inequalities are avoidable, unfair, and systematic differences in health between different groups of people. Health inequalities exist due to differences and interactions between a variety of factors across a population, including income, housing, and environment, as well as access to and experience of health and other social services. These factors and interactions are themselves often rooted in historical and ongoing experiences of discrimination and exclusion for some groups, which perpetuate inequality.
The COVID-19 pandemic has made clear an urgent need to address longstanding, interlinked social, economic, and health inequalities – and particularly in diverse (and highly unequal) urban areas. It is vital that we now learn lessons from the last few years and to bring together communities, voluntary organisations, the NHS, and local government in partnership to build trust and improve health and wellbeing across geographical areas, including through the Integrated Care Systems (ICS).
Across London boroughs, there is growing recognition of the connections between health, wealth, and place, and the role that public health, the voluntary and community sector, and other local council services can play in addressing inequalities locally.
The London Borough of Ealing was one of the areas of the capital hardest hit by the pandemic. In response, new local partnerships across health and social care, the voluntary sector, and community organisations emerged in Ealing, as in other places, illustrating the rich community assets and creativity of Ealing residents. Concerted efforts to sustainably link community assets with health and social services are needed, building on existing assets and connections.
In Ealing, the Institute of Development Studies is part of an established interdisciplinary and multisectoral partnership with local and national organisations including Ealing Council, NHS North West London, Southall Community Alliance, Voices of Colour, and The Young Foundation. The partnership uses participatory and ‘creative health’ processes to build shared understandings of the key ‘problems’ related to health inequity, centred on lived experience, and to develop and support community research capacity and evidence use.
The Living Roots partnership explores:
- how community organisations and stakeholders understand and experience health inequity and what are their priorities for action.
- what local assets, organisations, and partnerships have been established prior to, and during the pandemic.
- ideas and lessons for how the NHS and local government can build trust and work in partnership with voluntary and community organisations to improve health for local populations.
- how a community research partnership to improve health equity in Ealing be developed and sustained.
Click here to visit the Living Roots website and learn more, including about the work of its sister projects: Community Engagement for Pandemic Preparedness (CEPP) and Enabling Early Childhood Development in Ealing (ECDE).
You can also read more about our Ealing Council-led programme, building on the Living Roots initiative, to strengthen collaborative capacities for evidence generation, use and learning on the building blocks of health to drive greater health equity in Ealing.