People living in Wigan and Bolton are living longer than in previous generations, according to a new Greater Manchester study suggesting that devolution has been a key contributing factor.
The study from The Lancet Public Health showed that people in Greater Manchester have lived longer since the devolution deal gave the region more control over a range of services including health and social care.
Greater Manchester Leaders agreed a ground-breaking devolution deal with the government in 2014, which gave the county more control on how to spend budgets and the introduction of an elected mayor.
The Health Foundation funded study, published in The Lancet Public Health, showed that between 2014-16 and 2017-19:
Dr Britteon said: “The study shows modest improvements in life expectancy in Greater Manchester compared to comparable areas in the rest of the country from the introduction of devolution until the start of the Covid-2019 pandemic in 2020.
“This finding may have been driven by a combination of changes in response to the health and social care devolution agreement, the devolution of powers over wider public services, the election of a new mayor, or earlier steps to improve population health prior to devolution.
“The findings support the suggestion that devolved systems are able to more closely identify and address the needs of local populations.
“However, further research is required to understand the mechanisms behind the estimated effect.”
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