Several health outcomes (including mortality) and health-related behaviors are known to be worse in Scotland than in comparable areas of Europe and the United Kingdom. Within Scotland, Greater Glasgow (in West Central Scotland) experiences disproportionately poorer outcomes independent of measurable variation in socioeconomic status and other important determinants. Many reasons for this have been proposed, particularly related to deprivation, inequalities, and variation in health behaviors. The use of models (such as the application of Bradford Hill’s viewpoints on causality to the different hypotheses) has provided useful insights on potentially causal mechanisms, with health behaviors and inequalities likely to represent the strongest in...
Accounting for Scotland's Excess Mortality: Towards a Synthesis seeks to explain two distinct develo...
Background: Scotland experiences higher mortality than the rest of Western Europe with Glasgow exper...
AbstractGiven previous evidence that not all Scotland's higher mortality compared to England & Wales...
Introduction There exists a ‘Scottish effect’, a residue of excess mortality that remains for Scotla...
Introduction There exists a ‘Scottish effect’, a residue of excess mortality that remains for Scotla...
Scotland experiences high levels of ‘excess’ mortality: that is, higher mortality over and above tha...
This report is the latest in a series exploring the issue of ‘excess’ mortality in Scotland, and par...
Background: Despite the important, and well-established, link between poverty and poor health, pre...
ObjectivesThe aim of the study was to update previous analyses of 'excess mortality' in Glasgow (Sco...
Background At 77 years for males and 81 years for females, Scotland has the lowest life expectancy i...
Background Glasgow’s low life expectancy and high levels of deprivation are well documented. Studies...
Background This systematic scoping review was commissioned by NHS Health Scotland as one of a number...
Background: The link between deprivation and health is well established. However, recent research ha...
Scotland has some of the worst reported health in the developed world. In comparison to England and ...
Health inequalities are the unfair and avoidable differences in people's health between different so...
Accounting for Scotland's Excess Mortality: Towards a Synthesis seeks to explain two distinct develo...
Background: Scotland experiences higher mortality than the rest of Western Europe with Glasgow exper...
AbstractGiven previous evidence that not all Scotland's higher mortality compared to England & Wales...
Introduction There exists a ‘Scottish effect’, a residue of excess mortality that remains for Scotla...
Introduction There exists a ‘Scottish effect’, a residue of excess mortality that remains for Scotla...
Scotland experiences high levels of ‘excess’ mortality: that is, higher mortality over and above tha...
This report is the latest in a series exploring the issue of ‘excess’ mortality in Scotland, and par...
Background: Despite the important, and well-established, link between poverty and poor health, pre...
ObjectivesThe aim of the study was to update previous analyses of 'excess mortality' in Glasgow (Sco...
Background At 77 years for males and 81 years for females, Scotland has the lowest life expectancy i...
Background Glasgow’s low life expectancy and high levels of deprivation are well documented. Studies...
Background This systematic scoping review was commissioned by NHS Health Scotland as one of a number...
Background: The link between deprivation and health is well established. However, recent research ha...
Scotland has some of the worst reported health in the developed world. In comparison to England and ...
Health inequalities are the unfair and avoidable differences in people's health between different so...
Accounting for Scotland's Excess Mortality: Towards a Synthesis seeks to explain two distinct develo...
Background: Scotland experiences higher mortality than the rest of Western Europe with Glasgow exper...
AbstractGiven previous evidence that not all Scotland's higher mortality compared to England & Wales...