Teaching Undergraduate Social Determinants of Health: “Bad” Neighborhoods, “Those” People, and Dispelling the Stereotypical Portrayal of Poor, Urban Communities

IF 1.1 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Kristin M. Osiecki, Angie P. Mejia
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The current racial climate, the subsequent protests taking place in the state of Minnesota, and the social spotlight that followed, brought forth the importance of creating anti-racism initiatives in higher education. This article describes a significant curriculum redesign of an undergraduate social determinants of health (SDOH) course to include a module on examining social and community context with an emphasis on racism, discrimination, and violence. Course materials focused on a notorious urban housing project subject to media scrutiny, and a corrupt political system that resulted in policies perpetuating generational segregation, poverty, and violence. SDOH factors are presented in an upstream public health approach from the lens of individuals, and their perceptions of top down, uncontrollable institutional level forces that impact their quality of life. This module aims to disrupt students’ deep-rooted understanding about underserved urban populations and introduces them to a nuanced understanding of intersectionality around five key SDOH. The module incorporates an intersectional analysis within the praxis of public health and sociology to explore discrimination, institutional racism, and segregation beyond public health data driven indicators that examine race and disparate health outcomes. We found that preconceived notions of student knowledge, behavior, and belief systems contribute to the stereotypical views of urban, poor minority populations. Students discovered that despite neighborhood dysfunction, residents created strong social cohesive networks, were political advocates for change, and sought promised governmental economic opportunities. Students are better informed about “those” people in “bad” neighborhoods that struggle to overcome decades of institutionally designed obstacles created from subversive policies.
教授大学生健康的社会决定因素:“坏”社区、“那些”人,并消除对贫困城市社区的刻板印象
当前的种族气候,随后在明尼苏达州发生的抗议活动,以及随之而来的社会聚光灯,都表明了在高等教育中创建反种族主义倡议的重要性。本文描述了对本科生健康社会决定因素(SDOH)课程的重大课程重新设计,包括一个关于审查社会和社区背景的模块,重点是种族主义、歧视和暴力。课程材料侧重于一个臭名昭著的城市住房项目,该项目受到媒体的审查,以及腐败的政治制度,该制度导致了世代隔离、贫困和暴力的政策长期存在。SDOH因素体现在上游公共卫生方法中,从个人的角度来看,以及他们对自上而下、不可控制的制度层面力量的看法,这些力量会影响他们的生活质量。本模块旨在打破学生对服务不足的城市人口根深蒂固的理解,并向他们介绍对五个关键SDOH交叉性的微妙理解。该模块结合了公共卫生和社会学实践中的交叉分析,以探索歧视、制度性种族主义和隔离,超越公共卫生数据驱动的指标,这些指标考察种族和不同的健康结果。我们发现,对学生知识、行为和信仰体系的先入为主的观念助长了对城市贫困少数民族人口的刻板印象。学生们发现,尽管社区功能失调,但居民们还是建立了强大的社会凝聚力网络,是变革的政治倡导者,并寻求政府承诺的经济机会。学生们更了解“那些”在“坏”社区的人,他们努力克服颠覆性政策造成的几十年制度设计的障碍。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
33.30%
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