July 2024
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Revue Médicale Suisse
Life expectancy exists along a social gradient, where those with a high socioeconomic status (SES) live longer. The effect of SES can be explained via behavioral, material, and psychosocial pathways, which can be modified through social and public health policies. The behavioral pathway states that harmful health behaviors, like smoking, are more common among those of lower SES. The material pathway states that SES give access to different health-beneficial resources, like safe housing or healthy food. Finally, the psychosocial pathway states that a low SES causes a lack of autonomy leading to chronic stress. Understanding how SES affects life expectancy has clinical implications and is important to reduce socioeconomic health inequalities at the population level.