| Literature DB >> 25880442 |
Jerry M Spiegel1, Jaime Breilh2, Annalee Yassi3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Focus on "social determinants of health" provides a welcome alternative to the bio-medical illness paradigm. However, the tendency to concentrate on the influence of "risk factors" related to living and working conditions of individuals, rather than to more broadly examine dynamics of the social processes that affect population health, has triggered critical reaction not only from the Global North but especially from voices the Global South where there is a long history of addressing questions of health equity. In this article, we elaborate on how focusing instead on the language of "social determination of health" has prompted us to attempt to apply a more equity-sensitive approaches to research and related policy and praxis. DISCUSSION: In this debate, we briefly explore the epistemological and historical roots of epidemiological approaches to health and health equity that have emerged in Latin America to consider its relevance to global discourse. In this region marked by pronounced inequity, context-sensitive concepts such as "collective health" and "critical epidemiology" have been prominent, albeit with limited acknowledgement by the Global North. We illustrate our attempts to apply a social determination approach (and the "4 S" elements of bio-Security, Sovereignty, Solidarity and Sustainability) in five projects within our research collaboration linking researchers and knowledge users in Ecuador and Canada, in diverse settings (health of healthcare workers; food systems; antibiotic resistance; vector borne disease [dengue]; and social circus with street youth).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25880442 PMCID: PMC4353467 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-015-0091-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Figure 1Framing social determination versus social determinant orientation.
Health of health workers study (CIHR funded)
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| In analyzing options for improving occupational health conditions and decreasing the risk of infectious disease transmission, effects of global economic driving forces on understaffing, underfunding of public hospitals and cost-reducing work patterns are considered, in addition to the needs for implementing control measures for specific organisms. | Trends in increased health expenditures and improved access to healthcare have been identified as linked to political processes - with impacts on working conditions of health workers documented empirically. Health effect associations with organizational, environmental and individual work patterns are being revealed using multi-methods research techniques and placed in a micro-mezzo-macro framework to guide integrated interventions at different levels. |
| - Health justice | ||
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| Processes that produce disease, disability or death in health workers, and generate burnout in the healthcare workforce are explicitly recognized as leading to an unsustainable health system. | Empirical research conducted with survey research methods demonstrated burnout in medical staff, associated with their modes of living and the managerial decisions that affect their work life. |
| - Ecological justice | ||
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| Focus is on building conditions for empowering health workers and developing networks to share expertise and strengthen capacity to act collectively. Attention is paid to ensuring that interventions concentrate on equity of access to prevention measures as well as services. | Emphasis is on building local knowledge and capacity for action, with attention to needs of all healthcare workers. While yet unclear as to whether the networks being built will be formally recognized by existing institutional structures, hopefully they will be nurtured by camaraderie nonetheless. |
| - Social justice | ||
| - Agency | ||
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| Local ways of producing and disseminating evidence for decision-making are respected, with “outcomes of interest” determined by local values and priorities. | The interventions being implemented were identified and driven by the local Southern partners; information and work surveillance systems developed with Northern expertise will hopefully serve to assist in documenting effectiveness of interventions. |
| - Epistemological justice | ||
| - Interculturality | ||
| - Respect for local expertise |
Food systems & health Equity/healthy living (CIHR funded)
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| Multi-dimensional analysis of processes associated with the production, distribution and eating of food to monitor direct as well as indirect (e.g. including environmental and socio-cultural interaction) pathways at different scales (global, national, local) to consider concerns such as effects on healthy eating and food security, as well as the introduction of contaminants. | Comprehensive English and Spanish language literature reviews have been carried out to consider opportunities for interventions to address gaps – and take account of different emphases in different settings, including the scope of what is meant by “health equity” in different cultures, leading us to extend the research program vision to embrace “healthy living” and the 4S orientation. As part of this effort, we are exploring the feasibility of examining multiple agricultural contamination of food and contamination of breast milk in women as a result of intensive chemical contamination agriculture. |
| - Health justice | ||
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| Emphasis on considering food system effects on the sustainability of ecological and living systems that are otherwise undermined by the failure to take account of negative effects and positive opportunities associated with food production, distribution and consumption systems. | A comparative analysis of the positive and negative effects of agro-ecological and conventional production systems is underway to consider policy options to promote health equity by ensuring that such factors are considered in food-related decision-making. There are extensive measurement challenges in doing this. |
| - Ecological justice | ||
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| Attention to social capacities for building healthy production systems and relationships to counter pressures from concentrated interests that dominate the global food system. | We have been examining the efficacy and effectiveness of strategic alliances and networks to support alternatives to global pressures identified as promoting negative health impacts – and attempting to confirm interest of policy-makers in the findings. |
| - Social justice | ||
| - Agency | ||
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| Particular emphasis is on implications of operationalizing Food Sovereignty (recognized in the Ecuadorian Constitution) for promoting health. | Local capacities, resilience of social forces and the strength of the local agro ecologic culture to resist imposed food system transformations of food system relationships and assert healthier patterns is being reviewed, including consideration of policy options to enable this. |
| - Epistemological justice | ||
| - Interculturality | ||
| - Respect for local expertise |
An ecosystem approach to anti-microbial resistance (CIHR funded)
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| Antibiotic resistance is now rampant due to many processes: short-term profit-seeking behaviour on the part of Big Pharma and food production industries; inadequacies in healthcare provision which lead to self-medication due to inaccessible medical attention or needed medication; and especially the social disparities related to infectious diseases and their transmission due to inadequate sanitation, clean water, proper housing and nutrition. | We collaboratively developed an educational guidebook for community health promoters that not only provided them with information on differences between viruses and bacteria, when antibiotics are not needed and how to manage common upper respiratory tract infection or gastrointestinal disease likely of viral origins, but also addressed the social drivers of antimicrobial resistance. Unfortunately, our research fell short of designing, implementing and rigorously evaluating the impact of using our educational tools in interventions in communities. This was partly because of the absence of surveillance systems for antimicrobial use, let alone antimicrobial resistance – precluding objective evidence of impact, and partly because changes in personnel at the Health Ministry hindered the implementation of a well-designed intervention study. |
| - Health justice | ||
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| All organisms have a role in the complex ecosystems of our planet, and all life should be respected. The Ecuadorian constitution provides protection to nature independently of property rights. | Our discourse emphasizes the important role of microbes in the universe. Our collaborative Ecuadorian-Canadian team has been working to promote a “re-imaging of resistance” raising awareness that destruction of ecological integrity constitutes a threat to human health. We would have liked to contribute rigorous empirical evidence linking animal husbandry practices to increased antimicrobial resistance but were unable to do so. |
| - Ecological justice | ||
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| Combatting antimicrobial resistance, embracing a social determination of health approach, requires promoting grassroots mobilization to demand changes to the drivers of antimicrobial resistance, including not only changes in policies regarding drug use, but also equal access to clean water, safe food and healthcare services. | We conducted several workshops with community health promoters as well as provided a certificate program for health professionals that required their conducting projects in their communities, thereby building local capacity to address the immediate as well as more structural determination of antimicrobial resistance. However, we have not been able to rigorously evaluate our efforts to date. |
| - Social justice | ||
| - Agency | ||
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| Respect for indigenous beliefs and values is essential in promoting wellness and combatting the symptoms of minor infections. Ancestral knowledge, including the appropriate use of medicinal plants is to be encouraged. | We learned that merely incorporating information on how to use medicinal plants was a superficial way of trying to respect indigenous concepts of wellbeing, yet in order to maintain institutional support from experts who maintained that ancestral knowledge lacked an evidence-base, we could not give full appreciation to indigenous cosmology. |
| - Epistemological justice | ||
| - Interculturality | ||
| - Respect for local expertise |
Control and prevention of dengue (TDR/IDRC funded)
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| We are examining the presence/reproduction of unhealthy modes of living and unhealthy agricultural spaces in the context of an unhealthy metabolism between unsafe agricultural production and its ecological conditions. Emphasis is on understanding how social processes affect vector transmission in the socio-ecological context of an agro-industrial region as well as the associated exposure and vulnerability of marginalized populations amid an increasing and uneven prevalence of dengue. We anticipate that with increased attention to the engagement of the affected communities’ there will be a direct involvement in processes to decrease their vulnerabilities and to monitor negative impacts. | We have successfully demonstrated the INSOC (Social Insertion) index as a more sensitive measurement tool for analyzing social gradients of vulnerability. As well, a computerized system (SAT-Dengue) for rapid notification to increase the efficiency and effectiveness of health system performance has been introduced – with the intention of building this as part of an intersectoral integrated system for monitoring additional elements to be addressed in control and prevention actions. The effectiveness, albeit limited, of community prevention and control activities has been documented, setting the stage for a more comprehensive analysis of options for intervention that can provide stronger prospects for reducing exposure to dengue. |
| - Health justice | ||
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| Consideration of broader processes of land use, chemical application and food production is being considered in relation to the sustainability of conditions for healthy modes and living contexts. | Recognizing the limitations of what can be achieved through adaptive local community actions, attention to broader contextual processes has been introduced in reviewing study results, including opportunities for strengthening environmental regulations, municipal infrastructure and its economic feasibility and the interactions with broader patterns of agro-industrial development that have transformed the local ecology. |
| - Ecological justice | ||
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| Emphasis in the study has been on the role of community engagement (through the participation of health promoters and neighbourhood school activities) in achieving prevention and control of dengue by restricting conditions for the virus-carrying vector to multiply | Patterns of networks that are involved in dengue prevention and control have been analyzed to highlight need and opportunities for sustainably building effective community engagement, countering vertical paternalistic approaches such as that which was introduced by a “top-down” bio-larviciding program that was concurrently initiated by the Ministry of Health during the study period. |
| - Social justice | ||
| - Agency | ||
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| Effects on local communities of interactions with government and other institutions including has been carefully monitored, through direct involvement of local community organizations. | Greater accountability for further dengue activity by authorities is being emphasized; as are opportunities for communities to build on their increased involvement in this study to take on additional health priorities that they have identified in their health committees. |
| - Epistemological justice | ||
| - Interculturality | ||
| - Respect for local expertise |
Social circus and health equity (CIHR funded)
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| Economic and social marginalization leads to alienated youth with low self-esteem and poor mental and physical health as well as counterproductive styles of living. Social circus promotes personal growth (micro) through engaging creativity and building perseverance to take on challenges as well as generating a strong sense of solidarity (and possibly national pride) through team building, social engagement and social inclusion (mezzo level changes). These attitudes and skills lead to stronger communities better able to address the social processes that drive marginalization (macro level). | Using mixed methods research, including quantitative surveys, in additional to qualitative methods, we are clearly able to document and interrelate the micro and mezzo level impacts of social circus on participants and to a certain extent, their immediate community. Impact on social processes that drive marginalization will have to be assessed in a longer-term endeavour – as our longitudinal time frame is only 3 years. |
| - Health justice | ||
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| Many of the local programs are under threat, as they depend on public funding and awareness by various levels of government of the value of community programs such as this, despite what appears to be very strong benefits of social circus to those who participate. | We have yet to determine how best to study the “value” of these programs, in terms that will lead decision-makers to make solid commitments to sustain the programs. |
| - Ecological justice | ||
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| The innovative social intervention (social circus) can challenge hierarchical relationships, and indeed generate improved social democracy. Although the intervention per se (social circus) is the object of study and not under the control of the research team, the research team is endeavouring to conduct the research in a manner that itself is empowering. | The research has not only embraced participant observation, performance ethnography and other qualitative research methods but has placed particular emphasis on participatory arts-based research methods (e.g. “photovoice” and circo-theatrical research creation by participants) to further build local capacity and agency. Social class variables (INSOC) have been included in the longitudinal cohort study of social circus participants, to ascertain the relationship between social class, and the benefits of social circus. |
| - Social justice | ||
| - Agency | ||
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| The theoretical conceptualization of social circus is to value the contributions “from the margins” rather than merely to attempt to build skills in participants that will lead them to better conform to the market economy. Nonetheless different “promoters” of social circus have different objectives, with decreasing street-based lifestyles and building national pride figuring prominently. | While nurturing North-south bonds in this rapidly growing global social circus community, care is being taken to minimize cultural imperialism (particularly relevant because of the strong influence of Cirque du Soleil), and the research process is endeavouring to respect local art related practices and the pathways to fulfilment chosen by participants and their communities rather than impose external values. |
| - Epistemological justice | ||
| - Interculturality | ||
| - Respect for local expertise |