Towards a social determination of health framework for understanding climate disruption and health-disease processes.

Autor: Hasemann Lara JE; Iscte-IUL, CRIA-Iscte, Lisbon, Portugal., Díaz de León A; Department of Sociology and Criminology, University of Essex, Colchester, UK., Daser D; Department of Sociology, University of St. Gallen (HSG), St. Gallen, Switzerland., Doering-White J; Department of Anthropology and College of Social Work, University of South Carolina, Columbia, USA., Frank-Vitale A; School of Public and International Affairs and Department of Anthropology, Princeton University, New Jersey, USA.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Medical anthropology quarterly [Med Anthropol Q] 2024 Sep; Vol. 38 (3), pp. 313-327. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 May 22.
DOI: 10.1111/maq.12866
Abstrakt: We compare the social determinants of health (SDOH) and the social determination of health (SDET) from the school of Latin American Social Medicine/Collective Health. Whereas SDET acknowledges how capitalist rule continues to shape global structures and public health concerns, SDOH proffers neoliberal solutions that obscure much of the violence and dispossession that influence contemporary migration and health-disease experiences. Working in simultaneous ethnographic teams, the researchers here interviewed Honduran migrants in their respective sites of Honduras, Mexico, and the United States. These interlocutors connected their experiences of disaster and health-disease to lack of economic resources and political corruption. Accordingly, we provide an elucidation of the liberal and dehumanizing foundations of SDOH by relying on theorizations from Africana philosophy and argue that the social determination of health model better captures the intersecting historical inequalities that structure relationships between climate, health-disease, and violence.
(© 2024 American Anthropological Association.)
Databáze: MEDLINE