The government's austerity spending cuts cost the average person in the UK nearly half a year in life expectancy between 2010 and 2019, according to a new working paper published today (Wednesday, 19 June) by the London School of Economics and Political Science's (LSE) International Inequalities Institute and written by researchers at LSE and King's College London. The research found that life expectancy dropped by an average of five months for women and three months for men. This equates to about 190,000 excess deaths, or a three per cent increase in mortality rates over the period.
Factors responsible for these deaths include 'deaths of despair' from drug poisoning. Changes in healthcare spending and welfare accounted for 1000 such deaths which were preventable - approximately three per cent of all drug-poisoning deaths in England and Wales between 2010 and 2019. Another factor in the increased death rate was the decline in ambulance response quality during the austerity years.
In 2008, ambulances reached the scene within 19 minutes for 96.6 percent of emergency calls, but by 2017 this had dropped to 89.6 percent.
Part of this decline was due to changes in healthcare spending, resulting in over 35,000 people being at higher mortality risk. The level of excess deaths resulting from austerity measures represents a very substantial loss for society. And our estimates are likely to be conservative.
The true effects of austerity could be even more severe and enduring given that .