解决健康的社会决定因素:“弱势”人群和2020年健康人的介绍

Poroi Pub Date : 2020-01-07 DOI:10.13008/2151-2957.1297
E. Rodríguez, Dawn S. Opel
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引用次数: 5

摘要

:人口健康是国家医疗改革工作的核心概念。人口健康关注健康的社会决定因素,或人们在工作、家庭和娱乐中的生活条件。为了参与人口健康倡议,各组织必须收集人口层面的数据,通过绘制社区人口统计图,创造一种韧性的话语,即应对能力,就好像对尸体及其物质条件的统计为持续改善健康结果奠定了基础。2010年,美国卫生与公众服务部疾病预防和健康促进办公室(ODPHP)发起了一项名为“2020年健康人”的倡议,这是一套十年国家健康促进和疾病预防目标。我们分析了这个数据项目,认为关于弹性(通过改进国家、州和地方的数据收集工作)和脆弱性(被减少到数据中的人)的论述为美国公共卫生官员围绕人口健康事业团结起来,但却排除了这一事业应该关注的人,创造了一种构成性的修辞。具体而言,对ODPHP的《2020健康人》网站的审查表明,从Philip Wander的《第三人格》的视角来看,在卫生专业人员的数据显示中,将身体减少到量化,将历史上已经被边缘化的人群物化,并混淆了社会行动的途径。相反,我们认为,必须通过社区在决定其社区成员的健康和身心健康时的自主权,来促进对韧性的生态、关系定义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Addressing the Social Determinants of Health: “Vulnerable” Populations and the Presentation of Healthy People 2020
: Population health is a concept at the core of national healthcare reform efforts. Population health focuses on the social determinants of health, or the living conditions of people at work, home, and play. To participate in population health initiatives, organizations must collect population-level data, creating a discourse of resilience-as-ability-to-cope through mapping community demographics, as though a counting of bodies and their material conditions creates a foundation for sustained, improved health outcomes. In 2010, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (ODPHP) launched an initiative called Healthy People 2020, a set of ten-year national goals and objectives for health promotion and disease prevention. We analyze this data project, arguing that discourses of resiliency (through improved national, state, and local data collection efforts) and vulnerability (of the people who are reduced to data) create a constitutive rhetoric for U.S. public health officials to rally around the cause of population health yet exclude the very people upon whom such a cause should focus. Specifically, an examination of the ODPHP’s Healthy People 2020 website reveals that the reduction of bodies to quantification in data displays for health professionals, when viewed through the lens of Philip Wander’s Third Persona, objectifies groups of people already historically marginalized and obfuscates pathways to social action. We argue that instead, an ecological, relational definition of resilience must be fostered through autonomy of communities in the decisions they make about their own community members’ health and wellness.
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