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The Irish in Britain, including those of Irish descent, make up a significant part of the UK population. Here, you will find news, entertainment, events, sports and features from the local Irish Post newspaper.

 
 
 
 
Survival of the Fittest

Comment

The news that Irish people who have come to work in Britain are more likely to die early from a range of causes relating to poor health is not exactly new.

However, the fact that we have a lower life expectancy than for those members of other ethnic minority groups such as Bangladeshis and the Pakistani community is something that was previously unreported.

New research by the London Public Health Observatory for Britain’s chief medical officer Sir Liam Donaldson makes disturbing reading. It shows higher death rates among Irish people in Britain from all causes and in particular from cancer.

People who had to leave Ireland and come to Britain in poverty and in search of a living around the time of the 1950s were often the lowest of the low in the social scale.

They often were relegated to the poorest of housing conditions in inner city slums. They worked hard, in harsh conditions, especially the men who worked outdoors in all weathers in the construction industry without the measures in place to ensure their safety, as exists these days.

The lifestyle of these emigrants did not help either. Heavy smoking and often heavy drinking combined with poor diet did not make for a healthy lifestyle.

Is it any wonder then that, for example, Irish men living in Britain here still have a 127 per cent greater risk of dying from cancer of the mouth than the general population and a 132 per cent greater risk of dying from cancer of the larynx?

In addition to this, Irish people have the highest rate of admission to psychiatric hospitals in Britain and a rate of suicide that is 53 per cent above average.

The figures come from Health Impact Assessment of the Irish voluntary sector in a report that was published last year.

And the problems of Irish health have continued through into the second and third-generations.

There is a need for government and other agencies to do more to help improve the health of Irish people, particularly the elderly and disadvantaged. More should be done, for example, to encourage us to give up smoking, with campaigns that are targeted at us as an ethnic minority community with a habit.

After all, Irish people, especially Irish women, have contributed much to this country in income tax and health care work for others.

But Irish people can also do more to help themselves. If we have a problem, we should ensure we see a doctor or other professional person about it without delay. Late diagnoses of medical problems are linked with high rates of death in certain illnesses among Irish people.

Advice on healthy living should be part of the agenda in Irish clubs and societies and we may need to organise Irish visits for a workout at the gym.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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