Emerging issues: considerations for policymakers

 

Taking distinct perspectives on the implications of the UK leaving the EU for the public’s health, the essays in this collection have highlighted some common challenges.

  • There will be a ‘governance gap’ as the UK’s relationship with EU institutions comes to an end. This could lead to increased pressure on national institutions to deliver the operational and enforcement functions currently provided at EU level, such as food, environmental, and trading standards monitoring and enforcement.
  • It is possible that some social protections may be lost or weakened (eg for health, consumer safety and workers’ rights) if the government adopts a long-term deregulatory agenda – particularly if it is driven by pressure from other countries when reaching new trade agreements.
  • In the process of negotiating trade agreements, the UK may take a less robust approach to risk assessments applied to goods and services if future frameworks do not incorporate the precautionary principle, as is the case in the EU.
  • The replacement of EU funding with domestic funding could lead to less objective decisions about where the money is spent to support areas of investment need for regeneration, infrastructure and jobs, unless decisions are protected from political influence (at both national and local level).

The contributorss have also identified some opportunities to innovate, be progressive, put health at the heart of new policy frameworks for agriculture and employment, and make health a central consideration in international trade agreements. But all have pointed towards the conditions needed for better domestic policymaking for health to become a reality.

  • Kath Dalmeny and Nina Renshaw emphasise the crucial role of parliamentary oversight of decisions on all aspects of post-Brexit arrangements. They argue this is needed to make sure that the impacts on health of new trade deals and policy frameworks are taken into full account during negotiations.
  • Nina Renshaw says that trade negotiators and policymakers will need much better access to public health knowledge and impact assessment tools so that risks are fully understood and factored into any new trade agreements.
  • Sue Davies and Kath Dalmeny both caution that, without access to EU institutions and structures, the UK will need to invest in domestic capacity to bridge the governance gap.
  • Davies notes that strengthened trading standards services and the creation of a national arms’ length body with responsibility for consumer product safety will be needed at a time when trading patterns, supply chains and border controls become more complex. Dalmeny says that attention will need to be given to the increased pressures on environmental health services and the Food Standards Agency in protecting and promoting health.
  • Richard Kemp argues that a new mechanism for distributing support funds will be needed when the UK leaves the EU. It must allow decision making to be made based on need and free of political considerations.
  • Karen Steadman suggests that if policymakers establish a clear focus on what the UK wants from and for its workforce, it may be possible to capitalise on the positive, cross-department consensus on the value of good work that is developing and to better protect UK workers from the potentially disruptive effects of leaving the EU.

It is important to bear in mind there are major potential impacts on health that have not been discussed in this collection. The essays have not looked at the effects of leaving the EU on the wider economy, or on public finances and the likely impacts on jobs, earnings, investment in other public services, or on the cost of living. Recent estimates published by the Resolution Foundation and the UK Trade Policy Observatory suggest that poorer households are likely to be most affected by a ‘no deal’ in which trade tariffs and prices rise. These are all fundamental factors that shape people’s health and wellbeing.

Nor have the essays explored direct impacts on health and social care services in the UK. These include access to the EU’s health and care workforce, access to goods such as vaccines and radioisotopes for cancer treatments and scans, and future involvement with EU-wide collaborations for health-related research. Nor have they considered the proven health impacts of air pollution and the leading role played by the EU in setting and enforcing air quality standards – this has been analysed elsewhere. In addition to the challenges and opportunities identified by the essays, these factors must be addressed when the UK leaves the EU, to make sure all policies are developed with consideration of their impact on health.

Concluding thoughts

This essay collection has illustrated some of the less apparent ways in which the shift in the policy landscape on leaving the EU will have important implications for people’s opportunities to lead healthy lives. Good health is of value to the individual, and is also a societal asset – part of the foundations of a prosperous and flourishing society. It is therefore important that health considerations are placed at the heart of new policy frameworks, trade agreements, financial strategies and regulations after Brexit.

Leaving the EU has been described as an ‘unfrozen moment in which new possibilities occur’. It is also viewed as a point of immense risk and uncertainty that may harm economic prospects for people in the UK and overwhelm the governments in the four nations with vast amounts of legislative scrutiny for years to come.

Whether future challenges are perceived optimistically or pessimistically, leaving the EU will bring about change across all areas of policy. The potential scale and scope of this change present an opportunity to take a more ambitious, holistic approach to policymaking, with the goal of protecting and promoting the public’s health – as an economic investment and a social good. This will require strong political leadership, effective cross-government working and a shared understanding of how social policies can support better health.

The public health system cannot alone secure the protections and opportunities the UK’s departure from the EU presents. This will instead require broader coalitions with charities, academic institutions and think tanks working in health and non-health sectors.

There are already examples of concerted activities to raise issues, make the case to protect existing institutions, and propose new relationships for the future that will have an impact on the public’s health. Kath Dalmeny described how food and farming organisations have called for a new Food Act. The NHS Confederation instigated a Brexit Health Alliance of health care users, providers, commissioners and researchers to ensure health and care considerations are represented in Brexit negotiations. Another group – the Cavendish Coalition, a collaboration of 37 health and social care organisations – is working to make sure the UK still has a strong supply of domestic and international health and care staff and trainees after leaving the EU.

Addressing the breadth of the issues and opportunities identified in this collection of essays will demand a shared, confident vision for the future and more effective collaborations between organisations working in diverse policy areas, from trade and employment to planning and the environment. Public health campaigners have long called for a health-in-all-policies approach to policymaking. The changes in the regulatory and political landscape over the coming years will make this approach all the more necessary.

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