Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/1893/35148
Appears in Collections: | Management, Work and Organisation Journal Articles |
Peer Review Status: | Refereed |
Title: | Defining and conceptualising the commercial determinants of health |
Author(s): | Gilmore, Anna B Fabbri, Alice Baum, Fran Bertscher, Adam Bondy, Krista Chang, Ha-Joon Demaio, Sandro Erzse, Agnes Freudenberg, Nicholas Friel, Sharon Hofman, Karen J Johns, Paula Abdool Karim, Safura Lacy-Nichols, Jennifer de Carvalho, Camila Maranha Paes |
Contact Email: | krista.bondy@stir.ac.uk |
Keywords: | General Medicine |
Issue Date: | Apr-2023 |
Date Deposited: | 10-Jul-2023 |
Citation: | Gilmore AB, Fabbri A, Baum F, Bertscher A, Bondy K, Chang H, Demaio S, Erzse A, Freudenberg N, Friel S, Hofman KJ, Johns P, Abdool Karim S, Lacy-Nichols J & de Carvalho CMP (2023) Defining and conceptualising the commercial determinants of health. <i>The Lancet</i>, 401 (10383), pp. 1194-1213. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736%2823%2900013-2 |
Abstract: | Although commercial entities can contribute positively to health and society there is growing evidence that the products and practices of some commercial actors—notably the largest transnational corporations—are responsible for escalating rates of avoidable ill health, planetary damage, and social and health inequity; these problems are increasingly referred to as the commercial determinants of health. The climate emergency, the non-communicable disease epidemic, and that just four industry sectors (ie, tobacco, ultra-processed food, fossil fuel, and alcohol) already account for at least a third of global deaths illustrate the scale and huge economic cost of the problem. This paper, the first in a Series on the commercial determinants of health, explains how the shift towards market fundamentalism and increasingly powerful transnational corporations has created a pathological system in which commercial actors are increasingly enabled to cause harm and externalise the costs of doing so. Consequently, as harms to human and planetary health increase, commercial sector wealth and power increase, whereas the countervailing forces having to meet these costs (notably individuals, governments, and civil society organisations) become correspondingly impoverished and disempowered or captured by commercial interests. This power imbalance leads to policy inertia; although many policy solutions are available, they are not being implemented. Health harms are escalating, leaving health-care systems increasingly unable to cope. Governments can and must act to improve, rather than continue to threaten, the wellbeing of future generations, development, and economic growth. |
DOI Link: | 10.1016/s0140-6736(23)00013-2 |
Rights: | This is the accepted version of the paper, Gilmore, AB. et al. 2023, 'Defining and conceptualising the commercial determinants of health', The Lancet , vol. 401, no. 10383, pp. 1194-1213. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140- 6736(23)00013-2. This version is available in open access under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). |
Notes: | Additional authors: Robert Marten PhD, Prof Martin McKee DSc, Prof Mark Petticrew PhD, Lindsay Robertson PhD, Viroj Tangcharoensathien PhD, Anne Marie Thow PhD |
Licence URL(s): | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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Lancet_CDOH_Paper_1_revised_DEC_2022_CLEAN_Jul23_PDF.pdf | Fulltext - Accepted Version | 1.3 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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