Health Equity and Justice Frameworks
Health equity is the principle that everyone should have a fair opportunity to be as healthy as possible, and that systematic differences in health between more and less advantaged social groups — health inequities — are unjust and should be eliminated. Justice frameworks supply the normative reasoning that distinguishes an inequity from a mere variation in health.
Definition
Health equity is the absence of avoidable, unfair and remediable differences in health among social groups defined socially, economically, demographically or geographically; a health inequity (or disparity, in this sense) is such a difference that is systematically associated with social disadvantage.
Scope
This topic covers the definitions of equity, inequity and disparity; the distinction between differences that are simply variations and those that are avoidable and unfair; and the ethical and human-rights frameworks used to justify equity goals. It is reference-educational, clarifying concepts and their measurement rather than prescribing programmes.
Core questions
- What makes a difference in health an inequity rather than a neutral variation?
- How are equity and disparity defined and measured?
- Which justice frameworks ground the claim that health inequities are unfair?
- How does equity differ from equality in the allocation of health resources?
Key concepts
- Health equity versus health equality
- Health inequity and avoidable, unfair differences
- Health disparity
- Vulnerable and disadvantaged groups
- Distributive justice and human rights
- Measuring equity across the social gradient
Key theories
- Equity as fairness in opportunity for health
- An equitable distribution gives everyone a fair chance at health and removes differences linked to social disadvantage; equity therefore concerns the fairness of the process and conditions, not merely equal outcomes.
- Health equity as a matter of social justice
- Disparities tied to social disadvantage are framed as injustices because they are avoidable and arise from the unequal distribution of social and economic conditions, making their reduction an ethical obligation.
Mechanisms
Equity frameworks work by specifying who is being compared and on what grounds a difference counts as unfair. They identify social groups by position (income, education, race or ethnicity, gender, geography), assess whether observed differences are avoidable, and appeal to principles of justice or human rights to judge them unjust. This normative step is what turns a descriptive disparity into an equity claim and into a target for action.
Clinical relevance
Equity concepts help health professionals and systems recognize patterned, unfair differences in outcomes and access among the groups they serve. The topic clarifies normative and measurement frameworks at the population level and is not a basis for individual diagnostic or treatment decisions.
Epidemiology
Empirically, health follows a social gradient, and disparities by income, education, race and ethnicity, and geography are documented for life expectancy, infant mortality and chronic disease across many countries; equity frameworks provide the lens for interpreting these patterns as inequities rather than as inevitable variation.
History
Whitehead's 1992 articulation of the concepts and principles of equity and health gave the field an influential working definition, distinguishing avoidable and unfair differences from other variations. Braveman and colleagues developed the measurement and justice framing through the 2000s and 2010s, and the WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health embedded equity as a central global health goal.
Debates
- Equity of outcome versus equity of opportunity
- Frameworks differ on whether the goal is equal health outcomes across groups or fair opportunity and conditions for health, which bears on what counts as success and which interventions are appropriate.
Key figures
- Paula Braveman
- Margaret Whitehead
- Sofia Gruskin
- Michael Marmot
Related topics
Seminal works
- whitehead-1992
- braveman-gruskin-2003
- braveman-2006
- braveman-2011-justice
Frequently asked questions
- What is the difference between health equity and health equality?
- Equality means giving everyone the same resources or treatment; equity means allocating resources according to need so that everyone has a fair opportunity for health. Identical treatment can leave unfair gaps in place, which is why equity is the usual goal.
- Are all health disparities considered inequities?
- In the equity literature a disparity becomes an inequity when the difference is avoidable, unfair and systematically linked to social disadvantage; differences arising solely from unmodifiable biology are not in themselves inequities.