Authors
Theo Lorenc, Mark Petticrew, Vivian Welch, Peter Tugwell
Publication date
2013/2/1
Source
J Epidemiol Community Health
Volume
67
Issue
2
Pages
190-193
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd
Description
Background
Some effective public health interventions may increase inequalities by disproportionately benefiting less disadvantaged groups (‘intervention-generated inequalities’ or IGIs). There is a need to understand which types of interventions are likely to produce IGIs, and which can reduce inequalities.
Methods
We conducted a rapid overview of systematic reviews to identify evidence on IGIs by socioeconomic status. We included any review of non-healthcare interventions in high-income countries presenting data on differential intervention effects on any health status or health behaviour outcome. Results were synthesised narratively.
Results
The following intervention types show some evidence of increasing inequalities (IGIs) between socioeconomic status groups: media campaigns; and workplace smoking bans. However, for many intervention types, data on potential IGIs are lacking. By contrast, the …
Total citations
20122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320245366763868080977188878749
Scholar articles