Wallack Lawrence, Lawrence Regina
College of Urban and Public Affairs, Portland State University, Portland, OR, USA.
Am J Public Health. 2005 Apr;95(4):567-70. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2004.043844.
The mission of public health--improving the health of populations--is difficult to advance in public discourse because a language to express the values animating that mission has not been adequately developed. Following on the work of Robert Bellah, Dan Beauchamp, and others, we argue that the first "language" of American culture is individualism. A second American language of community--rooted in egalitarianism, humanitarianism, and human interconnection--serves as the first language of public health. These values resonate with many Americans but are not easily articulated. Consequently, reductionist, individualistic understandings of public health problems prevail. Advancing the public health approach to the nation's health challenges requires invigorating America's second language by recognizing the human interconnection underlying the core social justice values of public health.
公共卫生的使命——改善人群健康——在公共话语中难以推进,因为一种用以表达赋予该使命活力的价值观的语言尚未得到充分发展。继罗伯特·贝拉、丹·博尚及其他人的研究之后,我们认为美国文化的首要“语言”是个人主义。美国的第二种社区语言——植根于平等主义、人道主义和人际互联——则充当公共卫生的首要语言。这些价值观能引起许多美国人的共鸣,但却不易阐明。因此,对公共卫生问题的还原论、个人主义理解盛行。要推进以公共卫生方法应对国家的健康挑战,就需要通过认识到公共卫生核心社会正义价值观背后的人际互联来振兴美国的第二种语言。