Southport Reporter - You local online newspaper for Merseyside and the Liverpool City Region.

   
  .Sign up to get our FREE email news bulletins.  

   

News Report Page 3 of 15
Publication Date:-
2024-01-16
 
News reports located on this page = 2.

Stark report outlines health challenges in Liverpool by 2040 and the actions needed to tackle them

LIVERPOOL'S Director of Public Health is calling for radical; and systemic; changes to the way the City responds to health challenges to prevent reduced life expectancy and extended periods of ill health for residents in the City.

An 80 page document, written by Professor Matt Ashton:- 'State of Health in the City' to be discussed at a Council meeting of all Elected Members, at Liverpool Town Hall, on:- Wednesday, 17 January 2024; looks at the health of Liverpool's inhabitants since 1984, and outlines the work the Council, its partners and the Government need to do to tackle the challenges it is projecting by 2040.

The report says that unless changes are made, the City's residents could:-

  • Spend more than a quarter of their life (26.1%) in ill health.

  • Life expectancy for women would fall by 1 year.

  • The number of adults experiencing depression could more than double over the coming decade.

Currently Liverpool is the 3rd most deprived local authority in England, with 63% of residents living in areas ranked among the most deprived in England, and 3 in 10 children living in poverty.

Residents are living longer than previously, but progress has stalled over the last decade.

Life expectancy is currently 76.1 years for men and 79.9 years for women (national average:- 79.4 years for men / 83.1 years for women). However, life expectancy at birth varies widely in the City, and life expectancy varies by 15 years between those in the poorest and most affluent areas, and those in the most deprived areas live 18 more years in poor health.

Projections for 2040:-

  • The life expectancy of women will fall by 1 year, and they will be in good health for 4.1 fewer years than they are currently. Although they are starting from a lower base, men will live 6 months longer than currently, and more of that time; 1.8 years; will be spent in good health.

  • There will be an increase of between:- 33,000 to 38,000, in the number of people with major illness, defined as at least 2 long term conditions such as high blood pressure (up 20,300 to 99,600), cancer (up 16,100 to 34,100), diabetes (up 14,800 to 46,900), asthma (up 11,600 to 44,900) and chronic kidney disease (up 10,600 to 35,600).

  • The overall number of health conditions is projected to rise 191,300 (54%) to 546,600 - with the biggest increase being seen in the number of people diagnosed with depression, which is set to more than double, affecting 164,200 people.

  • The number of people with major illness will be 7 times the increase in the working age population, impacting Government income from taxes as people are unable to work.

  • The key health issues facing children and young people will be mental health, obesity and child poverty.

What Liverpool can do?

The report outlines a number of recommendations to address the challenges, including:-

  • Using data to embed a:- 'health equity' approach to making decisions. This will be assisted by £5 million of funding recently secured from the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Determinants Research Collaboration.

  • Working towards being a:- 'Marmot City' by April 2025, to address challenges in:- housing, income, climate change, mental health and welfare.

  • Improving access to healthcare services for underserved communities to improve prevention and reduce health inequalities.

  • Launching a new 'Healthy Child' programme in 2025, complementing the roll out of 5 Family Hubs in the City, so that children young people and their families get the services they need to protect and develop their health and wellbeing.

  • Integrating drug and alcohol services into a single, cohesive treatment and recovery service by 2025/26.

  • Implementing a City Region food strategy to improve access to healthy, affordable foods and eliminate food poverty.

  • Improving the understanding of mental health and wellbeing and shape services with partners to increase prevention, early detection and support and recovery services.

What national Government can do?

The report makes 3 recommendations for Government action:-

Devolved health powers to drive improvements in access to; and the quality of services, plus the ability to set a minimum unit pricing for alcohol and introduce a fast food tax.

National policy actions to tackle challenges such as:- child poverty, smoking, obesity and oral health.

More investment in preventative services, including a 3 to 4 year funding settlement for local Government to allow for longer-term planning and delivery of services.

The full report can be read online at:- Liverpool.Gov.UK.

Director of Public Health, Professor Matt Ashton, said:- "The findings are a stark and clear call for urgent action, not just by public bodies such as health services and the local authority, but for all those who have an interest in the current and future prosperity of the City. Poor physical and mental health shortens lives lived in good health and impacts not just on individuals but on those around them, such as other family members and the wider community. It is demonstrated to have a major detrimental impact on the economy through reduced productivity and increased demand for public services, and is a vicious cycle that needs to be broken."

Liverpool City Council Leader, Cllr Liam Robinson, said:- "This report is a sobering read which lays bare the challenges we face in improving the health of our population. There are significant challenges linked to long standing and endemic issues, particularly around poverty and poor housing. These have been exacerbated by cuts in welfare support and significant cuts to local authority spending which have impacted our ability to support our communities. We need to use this document as a catalyst to work together with our partners to implement the recommendations made within it, and to come together to lobby the Government for devolved powers and long term investment in services. Liverpool should have the ambitions of a devolved nation, for example I would argue that Liverpool needs the power to set minimum unit pricing on alcohol, which has had a positive impact on improving health outcomes in Scotland. From the appointment of Dr William Duncan as the 1st ever Director of Public Health, to leading the way in making workplaces smoke free, Liverpool has a long and proud tradition of pioneering public health improvements; and this is exactly the moment when we need to do the same again."

Cllr Carl Cashman, Leader of the Opposition at Liverpool City Council, said:- "This report needs to be read as a wakeup call for the City, the Council and the Government - that we need to take urgent action to improve health outcomes in Liverpool. It's clear that there's no quick fix, we need to take the lead together, as a local authority, to do what we can to improve the lives of our residents and eradicate health inequality in our City. As the opposition we will play our vital role in holding the administration to account and making sure they are delivering on the recommendations that Professor Ashton has put forward."


Award winning showcase by Craig Easton to be displayed at Williamson Art Gallery

LEAD IMAGE Mohammed Afzal, Birdman of Bank Top by Craig Easton.

THE touring exhibition:- 'Craig Easton - Is Anybody Listening?' opens at Birkenhead's Williamson Art Gallery and Museum, on:- 26 January 2024. Commissioned by the University of Salford Art Collection and supported by The National Lottery Heritage Fund, the exhibition showcases 2 award winning series of photographs, alongside an engagement programme for young people called Our Time, Our Place.

A long-time advocate for authentically representing communities in the North, Easton's exhibition seeks to challenge stereotypes and raise aspirations of young people within the Region.

Craig Easton - Is Anybody Listening? has toured across 4 locations:- Salford, Blackpool, Liverpool and Birkenhead. The engagement programme, Our Time, Our Place, which also includes Blackburn, has empowered young people to discuss current issues, explore their own history, and share it through pathways in photography and associated practices. Outcomes of this engagement work will be exhibited concurrently with Easton's Bank Top and Thatcher's Children.

"Fundamentally, this project aims to instil pride and inspire communities to shed a new light on their heritage through photography. Craig Easton is 1 of our valued alumni and to have him onboard for this project is very exciting. Together we hope to empower marginalised voices to explore their own social history through a lens."
says Lindsay Taylor, Curator at the University of Salford Art Collection.

Easton won Photographer of the Year (2021) at the Sony World Photography Awards with his series Bank Top, a collaboration with writer, poet and social researcher Abdul Aziz Hafiz, examining the representation and misrepresentation of northern communities. Commissioned by Blackburn Museum and Art Gallery, the work focused on a small, tight knit community in Blackburn.

He also took 2nd place in the documentary category for Thatcher's Children, which explores the inter generational nature of poverty and economic hardship as experienced by 3 generations of 1 family across the Northwest.

A passionate believer in working collaboratively with others, Easton also conceived and led the critically acclaimed 16 project with 16 leading photographers exploring the hopes, ambitions and fears of 16 year olds all around the UK.

He often tackles stereotypes and responds to the negative way in which the mainstream media can portray Northern communities. The relevance of Easton's work has resurfaced in a new light as communities endure the cost of living crisis and face new challenges and segregation.

Craig Easton said:- "I believe in the importance of committed documentary photography as a visual record of our social and cultural history. As such I'm excited to be part of the Our Time, Our Place programme to encourage and support young people across the Region to find their own ways to express their concerns, examine our ever changing society and explore our communities. I hope that between us all we can make work that will, for years to come, stand as an historical record of the challenges we face in 2020s Britain."

In addition to the tour and engagement programme the funding from The National Lottery Heritage Fund will also enable key pieces of his work to enter the University of Salford Art Collection, as a permanent legacy of the project.

The exhibition:- Craig Easton - Is Anybody Listening? runs from:- 26 January to 6 April 2024 at the Williamson Art Gallery & Museum, Birkenhead.

 
      
 
Back Next
 
News Report Audio Copy
 
  
This Edition's Main Sponsor:- Holistic Realignment

This Edition's Main Sponsor:- Holistic Realignment - Your local, fully qualified sports therapist. Call now on:- 07870382109 to book an appointment.

 

 

Please support local businesses like:-
The Kings Plaice 

Our live webcams...

This is a live image that reloads every 30 seconds.

An Image from our Southport Webcam above. To see it live, please click on image.


See the view live webcamera images of the road outside our studio/newsroom in the hart of Southport.

An Image from our Southport Webcam above. To see it live, please click on image.

 

Please support local businesses like:-

 


Click on to find out why the moon changes phases.  
This is the current phase of the moon. For more lunar related information, please click on here.

Disability Confident - Committed

 

Find out whats on in and around Merseyside!



This is just 1 of the events on our event calendar, click on
here to see lots more!

This online newspaper and information service is regulated by IMPRESS, the UK Press Regulator.

This online newspaper and information service is regulated by IMPRESS the independent monitor for the UK's press.

This is our process:-
Complaints
Policy - Complaints Procedure - Whistle Blowing Policy

Contact us:-

(+44)
  08443244195

Calls will cost 7p per minute, plus your telephone company's access charge.
Calls to this number may be recorded for security, broadcast, training and record keeping.

Click on to see our Twitter Feed.   Click on to see our Facebook Page.   This website is licence to carry news from Vamphire.com and UK Press Photography. Click on to see our Twitter Feed.


Our News Room Office Address

Southport and Mersey Reporter, 4a Post Office Ave,
Southport, Merseyside, PR9 0US, UK

 
 
Tracking & Cookie Usage Policy - Terms & Conditions
 
 
  - Southport Reporter® is the Registered Trade Mark of Patrick Trollope.