Johan Mackenbach, awarded an honorary doctorate for his work on health inequalities, in a discussion of burning issues in tackling health inequalities
Vincent Lorant, William D’Hoore

TL;DR
An honorary doctorate was awarded to Johan Mackenbach for his work on health inequalities, followed by a discussion on effective policies to address them.
Contribution
The discussion emphasizes the need for evidence-based policies and balancing health with broader well-being dimensions.
Findings
Welfare systems have not effectively addressed diseases of affluence.
Health policies should consider opportunity costs and balance multiple well-being dimensions.
Policymakers should prioritize evidence-based measures like taxes on tobacco and alcohol.
Abstract
On 20 March 2015, Professor Johan Mackenbach of the Erasmus University Medical Centre was awarded a doctorate honoris causa by the Catholic University (Université Catholique) of Louvain, Belgium, for his outstanding contribution to the analysis of health inequalities in Europe and to the development of policies intended to address them. In this context, a debate took place between Professor Mackenbach, Professor Maniquet, a well-being economist, and a representative of the Federal Health Ministry (Mr. Brieuc Vandamme). They were asked to debate on three topics. (1) socio-economic inequalities in health are not smaller in countries with universal welfare policies; (2) Policies needs to target either absolute inequalities or relative inequalities; (3) The focus of policies should either address the social determinants of health or concentrate on access to health care. The results of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth disparities and outcomes · Employment and Welfare Studies · Global Health Care Issues
