Literature DB >> 9877345

Promoting health, promoting women: the construction of female and professional identities in the discourse of community health workers.

J Ramirez-Valles1.   

Abstract

Community health worker (CHW) programs are implemented in the third world and among racial minorities in the U.S. by public health professionals with the goal of improving people's access to basic health services. There is a shared view that women's roles as mothers make them effective CHWs because most health practices are located within the realm of the family. The objective of this paper is to inquire how and what concepts of woman are constructed and promoted in CHW programs. Viewing CHW as a discourse, I examine literature on CHWs using a critical feminist perspective and insights from narrative and rhetorical analyses. I argue that CHW positions women living in the third world and non-white Hispanic women in the U.S. as the "other" woman. The natural attributes of this other woman include mother, care giver, oppressed, child-like, and victim of patriarchy, religion, poverty, and diseases. These attributes are used to define categories of the female such as "the third world woman" and "Hispanic woman". These categories, in turn, define two unnamed opposite categories: "the first world woman" and "the public health professional". I conclude that CHW is a colonizing discourse and that public health professionals and feminists need to practice reflexivity.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1998        PMID: 9877345     DOI: 10.1016/s0277-9536(98)00246-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  6 in total

1.  Engaging men as promotores de salud: perceptions of community health workers among Latino men in North Carolina.

Authors:  Laura Villa-Torres; Paul J Fleming; Clare Barrington
Journal:  J Community Health       Date:  2015-02

2.  Combining community-based research and local knowledge to confront asthma and subsistence-fishing hazards in Greenpoint/Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York.

Authors:  Jason Corburn
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2002-04       Impact factor: 9.031

3.  The role of social participation in municipal-level health systems: the case of Palencia, Guatemala.

Authors:  Ana Lorena Ruano
Journal:  Glob Health Action       Date:  2013-09-10       Impact factor: 2.640

4.  Volunteers in Ethiopia's women's development army are more deprived and distressed than their neighbors: cross-sectional survey data from rural Ethiopia.

Authors:  Kenneth Maes; Svea Closser; Yihenew Tesfaye; Yasmine Gilbert; Roza Abesha
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2018-02-14       Impact factor: 3.295

5.  'It's the sense of responsibility that keeps you going': stories and experiences of participation from rural community health workers in Guatemala.

Authors:  Ana Lorena Ruano; Alison Hernández; Kjerstin Dahlblom; Anna Karin Hurtig; Miguel San Sebastián
Journal:  Arch Public Health       Date:  2012-08-10

6.  Connecting communities to primary care: a qualitative study on the roles, motivations and lived experiences of community health workers in the Philippines.

Authors:  Eunice Mallari; Gideon Lasco; Don Jervis Sayman; Arianna Maever L Amit; Dina Balabanova; Martin McKee; Jhaki Mendoza; Lia Palileo-Villanueva; Alicia Renedo; Maureen Seguin; Benjamin Palafox
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2020-09-11       Impact factor: 2.655

  6 in total

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