B1 Non-refereed article in a scientific journal

Foreword to WIS 2018: Special Issue on: “Fighting Inequalities”




AuthorsReima Suomi, Hongxiu Li, Ágústa Pálsdóttir, Roland Trill

PublisherSosiaali- ja terveyshuollon tietojenkäsittely-yhdistys

Publication year2019

JournalFinnish Journal of eHealth and eWelfare

Volume11

Issue4

First page 244

Last page245

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.23996/fjhw.86832

Web address https://doi.org/10.23996/fjhw.86832

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/42717514


Abstract

In August 2018 the seventh conference in the series
“Well-being in the Information Society” (WIS 2018) was
organized in Turku, in co-operation between University
of Turku and the Baltic Region Healthy Cities Association. The conference focused on inequalities in our
societies representing an active approach called
“Fighting Inequalities”.
Inequality describes in general an unfair situation in
which some people have more rights or better opportunities than other people.
Health(care) inequalities or those in welfare can be
defined as differences in health status or in the distribution of health determinants between different population groups, for example, differences in mobility between elderly people and younger populations or
differences in mortality rates between people from
different social classes. A growing number of inequalities are related to different competences and skills in
the exploding information society, for example different access to information and data. Some health inequalities are attributable to biological variations or free
choice and others are attributable to the external environment and conditions mainly outside the control of
the individuals concerned. In the first case it may be
impossible or ethically or ideologically unacceptable to
change the health determinants, and so the health
inequalities are unavoidable. In the second, the uneven
distribution may be unnecessary and avoidable as well
as unjust and unfair, so that the resulting health inequalities also lead to inequity in health


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Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 21:15