Abstract
Aims: The gradient in health inequalities reflects a
relationship between health and social circumstance, demonstrating that health
worsens as you move down the socio-economic scale. For more than a decade, the
Norwegian National government has developed policies to reduce social
inequalities in health by levelling the social gradient. The adoption of the
Public Health Act in 2012 was a further movement towards a comprehensive policy.
The main aim of the act is to reduce social health inequalities by adopting a
Health in All Policies approach. The municipalities are regarded key in the
implementation of the act. The SODEMIFA project aimed to study the development
of the new public health policy, with a particular emphasis on its
implementation in municipalities. Methods: In the SODEMIFA
project, a mixed-methods approach was applied, and the data consisted of surveys
as well as qualitative interviews. The informants were policymakers at the
national and local level. Results: Our findings indicate that
the municipalities had a rather vague understanding of the concept of health
inequalities, and even more so, the concept of the social gradient in health.
The most common understanding was that policy to reduce social inequalities
concerned disadvantaged groups. Accordingly, policies and measures would be
directed at these groups, rather than addressing the social gradient.
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