Saturday 18th October 2003
The Glamorgan Building, University of Cardiff, Cathays Park Cardiff
PROGRAMME
10.00 am REGISTRATION AND COFFEE/TEA
10.30 am WELCOME AND SETTING THE SCENE
Julian Tudor Hart - Chair of SHA Cymru
10.50 am FIRST WORKSHOP SESSION - THREE THEMES
1 Care of the Elderly
2 Public and Patient Participation
3 Partnership Working
12.15 pm REPORT BACK SESSION chaired by Paul Walker, Chair of SHA
12.35 pm LUNCH BREAK - delegates to bring their own food
Coffee, tea and juices will be provided
1.05 pm SECOND WORKSHOP SESSION - THREE THEMES
4 Democratising the NHS
5 Services for children - our future
6 Public health and tackling inequalities
2.35 pm REPORT BACK SESSION
chaired by Paul Walker
2.55 pm
Professor Gareth Williams
School of Social Science Cardiff University
(speaker's notes)
'This is the first point to grasp about the history of this people. Wales is
impossible. A country called Wales exists only because the Welsh invented it.
The Welsh exist only because they invented themselves. They had no choice.....
Men and women make their own history. But they do not make it in circumstances
chosen by them.…’
(Gwyn A. Williams, When Was Wales?, Penguin, 1985, pp 3-5)
‘Graig level killed a few men, besides silicotics, arthritics, ripped flesh, smashed bones and damaged souls… Black historied all right, the Graig level, where we slaved in dust and water, where I worked with or in the same headings as Sid Hullen (dust, dead), Jimmy Shanklyn (rheumatic fever, dead), Walt James (dust, dead), Cliff Williams (TB, dead), my father (dust, arthritis, dead)… Just a small level, the Graig, where lads were punished by grinding toil, and before that weakened by the diet of beggars’
(Ron Berry, History
is What You Live, 1998)
‘Standards of health were continually and insidiously undermined. Children, in particular suffered from malnutrition, rickets, diphtheria and pneumonia, with a fifth of Merthyr children in the late 1930s dying before they reached their fifth birthday. Average life expectancy in Merthyr was forty-six and a half years in 1932, and 65,000 of the inhabitants of the coalfield died ‘avoidable deaths’, due to the impact of poverty upon health, in the decade after 1926’
(Chris Williams, Capitalism, Community and Conflict: the south Wales Coalfield 1898-1947, 1998).

Merthyr Tydfil 22%
Blaenau Gwent 21%
Rhondda Cynon Taff 21%
| Local Authority | Limiting long term illness | General health - not good | Permanently sick or disabled | Ranking % Permanently sick or disabled |
| Easington | 30.8% | 17.3% | 16.3% | 1 |
| Merthyr Tydfil | 30.0% | 18.1% | 15.9% | 2 |
| Neath Port Talbot | 29.4% | 16.4% | 13.6% | 4 |
| Blaenau Gwent | 28.3% | 16.5% | 13.8% | 3 |
| Rhondda Cynon Taf | 27.2% | 15.7% | 13.0% | 5 |
| Caerphilly | 26.3% | 15.0% | 12.1% | 7 |
| Carmarthenshire | 26.3% | 13.9% | 11.1% | 9 |
| Bolsover | 25.8% | |||
| Blackpool | 25.4% | 13.9% | ||
| Barnsley | 25.2% | 14.1% | ||
| Torfaen | 13.9% | |||
| Knowsley | 12.2% | 6 | ||
| Liverpool | 11.4% | 8 | ||
| Barrow in Furness | 10.8% | 10 |

Merthyr Tydfil 35%
Blaenau Gwent 34%
Neath Port Talbot 32%

Merthyr Tydfil 66.4%
Blaenau Gwent 64.4%
Rhondda Cynon Taff 63.8%

Blaenau Gwent 37%
Merthyr Tydfil 33%
Gwynedd 30%

Merthyr Tydfil 43%
Blaenau Gwent 43%
Rhondda Cynon Taff 39%
| Date | Collieries | Workforce |
| 1947 | 214 | 114,930 |
| 1960 | 127 | 83,400 |
| 1970 | 52 | 38,000 |
| 1980 | 35 | 25,328 |
| 1990 | 3 | 1,200 |
| 1994 | 0 | 0 |
… we have been left in no doubt about the scale of deprivation and decline. But what makes the coalfields special is the context in which this decline has taken place. They have a unique combination of concentrated joblessness, physical isolation, poor infrastructure and severe health problems.
(CTF, 1998, para 1.2)
‘[In South Wales] This was not just a case of localised economic decline but rather one of cultural crisis. The collapse of coalmining undermined a range of mechanisms of social regulation that were grounded in the politics of the workplace and the trades unions, but spread more widely into local society and politics. There was an acute sense of loss in places in which coalmines closed after decades of existence.’
Bennet, Beynon, Hudson, Coalfields Regeneration: Dealing with the Consequences
of Industrial Decline, Bristol, The Policy Press, (2000)
[From Dalgren and Whitehead]

‘What is missing is a discussion of the relationship between agency (the ability
of people to deploy a range of causal powers), practices (the activities that
make and transform the world we live in) and social structure (the rules and
resources in society). Without such an understanding, factors associated with
people’s disease experiences within a context tend to be denuded of social meaning’
(Frohlich, K. et al, A theoretical proposal for the relationship between context
and disease, Sociology of Health and Illness, 23, 2001, 776-797)
‘The doctor put me on Prozac a few months back, for living here, because it’s
depressing. You get up, you look around, and all you see is junkies… I know
one day I will come off, I will get off here. I mean I started drinking a hell
of a lot more since I’ve been on here. I drink every night. I have a drink every
night just to get to sleep. I smoke more as well. There’s lots of things…‘
(Single mother with one child living on a housing estate in a northern English
town).
‘In the space of about six months about two years ago I buried five drug-related
deaths. The youngest was 18 years of age and the oldest was a 27 year old mother
who lived in one of the streets up here. And I knew her parents fairly well.
She left a three year old boy for her parents to look after’.
(Church Minister, Blaenau Gwent)
‘People talk not only about the effect on individuals; it’s the effect on the
borough - everybody, regardless of whether they are employed by Corus or not.
I think there is a huge concern that in an area that appeared to going downhill
anyway this is the final nail in the coffin’
(Health Visitor, Blaenau Gwent)
Legacy of poor health
Sustainable health and well-being
Healthy lifestyle
Healthy environment
Partnerships for health
Measuring progress
‘The Assembly has developed […] a number of strategies to counteract social exclusion and to create a socially inclusive Wales. It recognised the importance of building and supporting strong communities where the values of citizenship and collective action can grow […] This (Health) Plan builds on wide consultation over the elements that make it up and is part of the process of replacing elite policy making by participative policy development. Our policy here is to build on this commitment and to continue to enhance the citizen’s voice at the heart of policy (emphases in the original).
(National Assembly for Wales, Improving Health in Wales: a Plan for the NHS with its Partners, January 2001)
A health service not an illness service
A primary care led service
Making it local
Citizens not consumers
Equality of outcome
Power comes from ‘voice’ not ‘choice’
Investing today for tomorrow
Innovative experiment in a primary-care led, public health orientated health
system
Underpowered health service, with lack of policy capacity
Instability of multi-agency partnerships
Development of scientific and civic capacity
'Small wonder that some, looking ahead, see nothing but a vision of a depersonalized Wales which has shrivelled up into Costa Bureaucratica in the south and a Costa Geriatrica in the north; in between, sheep, holiday homes burning merrily away and fifty folk museums where there used to be communities'
(Gwyn A. Williams, When Was Wales? Penguin, 1985, p 303)
3/05/06