Literature DB >> 27306743

"Making it personal": ideology, the arts, and shifting registers in health promotion.

Jessica S Ruthven1,2.   

Abstract

In South Africa, health promotion related to HIV/AIDS has been characterised as a component of public health prevention. It has heavily utilised global health ideology to construct promotional messages that rely on neoliberal models of individual, responsible health citizenship. However, after nearly 30 years of public health messaging, there have been only minor shifts in the country's HIV prevalence rates; it has become apparent that there is disconnect between policy, programmes, and target audiences. Debates about where this disconnect occurs tend to focus on the role of problems in biomedical knowledge translation or with structural inequalities that lead to health inequity. As debates increase, artists involved in health have emerged to address an additional reason: audience interpellation. In this article, I interrogate relationships between health promotion ideology and processes of interpellation. I suggest that disconnect between the two has roots in the tone of programming, the ways sociality is constructed within health promotion, and the kind of subject which global prevention programmes seek to constitute. Using a case study, I illustrate how public health ideology is made actionable through arts practice. While conventional health promotion programmes address populations in a way that allows individuals to distance themselves, members of South Africa's arts sector have worked to integrate prevention and care in a way that bolsters interpellation through making messages personal. The case study presents one performance but is informed by my broader research with over 20 theatrical groups conducted during 18 months of fieldwork. Analysis of the production reveals that artists act as mediators between population-level public health messages and individuals through the embodied technologies of applied theatre. However, I argue that artists also create space for participants to reimagine configurations of care, responsibility, and intimacy within health practices.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Care; HIV/AIDS; South Africa; governmentality; interpellation; theatre

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27306743     DOI: 10.1080/09540121.2016.1195485

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS Care        ISSN: 0954-0121


  17 in total

Review 1.  A review of current literature on the impact of HIV/AIDS on children in sub-Saharan Africa.

Authors:  G Foster; J Williamson
Journal:  AIDS       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 4.177

2.  Failure to test children of HIV-infected mothers in South Africa: implications for HIV testing strategies for preschool children.

Authors:  Meera K Chhagan; Shuaib Kauchali; Stephen M Arpadi; Murray H Craib; Fatimatou Bah; Zena Stein; Leslie L Davidson
Journal:  Trop Med Int Health       Date:  2011-08-31       Impact factor: 2.622

Review 3.  HIV testing for children in resource-limited settings: what are we waiting for?

Authors:  Scott Kellerman; Shaffiq Essajee
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2010-07-20       Impact factor: 11.069

4.  Mortality of infected and uninfected infants born to HIV-infected mothers in Africa: a pooled analysis.

Authors:  Marie-Louise Newell; Hoosen Coovadia; Marjo Cortina-Borja; Nigel Rollins; Philippe Gaillard; Francois Dabis
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2004 Oct 2-8       Impact factor: 79.321

5.  Poverty and psychological health among AIDS-orphaned children in Cape Town, South Africa.

Authors:  Lucie Cluver; Frances Gardner; Don Operario
Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2009-06

Review 6.  Challenges to pediatric HIV care and treatment in South Africa.

Authors:  Tammy Meyers; Harry Moultrie; Kimesh Naidoo; Mark Cotton; Brian Eley; Gayle Sherman
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2007-12-01       Impact factor: 5.226

7.  Early antiretroviral therapy and mortality among HIV-infected infants.

Authors:  Avy Violari; Mark F Cotton; Diana M Gibb; Abdel G Babiker; Jan Steyn; Shabir A Madhi; Patrick Jean-Philippe; James A McIntyre
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2008-11-20       Impact factor: 91.245

Review 8.  The United States President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief: a story of partnerships and smart investments to turn the tide of the global AIDS pandemic.

Authors:  Eric Goosby; Mark Dybul; Anthony S Fauci; Anthony A Fauci; Joe Fu; Thomas Walsh; Richard Needle; Paul Bouey
Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr       Date:  2012-08-15       Impact factor: 3.731

Review 9.  HIV infection and sexual risk behaviour among youth who have experienced orphanhood: systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Don Operario; Kristen Underhill; Carolyn Chuong; Lucie Cluver
Journal:  J Int AIDS Soc       Date:  2011-05-18       Impact factor: 5.396

Review 10.  Uptake of home-based voluntary HIV testing in sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Kalpana Sabapathy; Rafael Van den Bergh; Sarah Fidler; Richard Hayes; Nathan Ford
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2012-12-04       Impact factor: 11.069

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  1 in total

Review 1.  Arts-based approaches to promoting health in sub-Saharan Africa: a scoping review.

Authors:  Christopher Bunn; Chisomo Kalinga; Otiyela Mtema; Sharifa Abdulla; Angel Dillip; John Lwanda; Sally M Mtenga; Jo Sharp; Zoë Strachan; Cindy M Gray
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2020-05
  1 in total

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