Access to civil justice as a social determinant of health: a legal epidemiological cross-sectional study
Eddy Hin Chung Fung, Dong Dong

TL;DR
This study shows that access to civil justice affects health outcomes like quality of life and mental health, supporting its role as a social determinant of health.
Contribution
The study provides the first empirical evidence linking access to civil justice with specific health dimensions using legal epidemiological methods.
Findings
Perceived access to civil justice was negatively linked to quality of life, except for social relationships.
Access to civil justice was positively associated with anxiety, depression, and comorbidities.
Improving access to civil justice could promote public health through health-justice partnerships.
Abstract
Although it is widely acknowledged that access to civil justice (ATJ) is a key social determinant of health (SDOH), the existing literature lacks empirical evidence supporting ATJ as a SDOH for specific dimensions of health. A legal epidemiological, cross-sectional, postal survey was conducted on n = 908 randomly sampled participants in Hong Kong in March 2023. Data collected were perceptions of the civil justice system, health, and sociodemographics. Perceived ATJ was assessed using a modified version of the Inaccessibility of Justice scale (IOJ) and Perceived Inequality of Justice scale (PIJ), i.e. the “modified IOJ-PIJ”, consisting of 12 of the original 13 items from both scales divided into two subdomains: “procedural fairness”, and “outcome neutrality”. For health data, quality of life was assessed using the Hong Kong version of the Abbreviated World Health Organization Quality of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life · Public Health Policies and Education · Medical Malpractice and Liability Issues
