Labonté Ronald, Schrecker Ted
Department of Epidemiology and Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Institute of Population Health, University of Ottawa, Canada.
Global Health. 2007 Jun 19;3:5. doi: 10.1186/1744-8603-3-5.
Globalization is a key context for the study of social determinants of health (SDH). Broadly stated, SDH are the conditions in which people live and work, and that affect their opportunities to lead healthy lives.In this first article of a three-part series, we describe the origins of the series in work conducted for the Globalization Knowledge Network of the World Health Organization's Commission on Social Determinants of Health and in the Commission's specific concern with health equity. We explain our rationale for defining globalization with reference to the emergence of a global marketplace, and the economic and political choices that have facilitated that emergence. We identify a number of conceptual milestones in studying the relation between globalization and SDH over the period 1987-2005, and then show that because globalization comprises multiple, interacting policy dynamics, reliance on evidence from multiple disciplines (transdisciplinarity) and research methodologies is required. So, too, is explicit recognition of the uncertainties associated with linking globalization - the quintessential "upstream" variable - with changes in SDH and in health outcomes.
全球化是健康社会决定因素(SDH)研究的关键背景。广义而言,健康社会决定因素是人们生活和工作的条件,这些条件会影响他们过上健康生活的机会。在这个由三篇文章组成的系列的第一篇文章中,我们描述了该系列的起源,它源于为世界卫生组织健康社会决定因素委员会的全球化知识网络开展的工作,以及委员会对健康公平的特别关注。我们解释了我们参照全球市场的出现以及推动其出现的经济和政治选择来界定全球化的基本原理。我们确定了1987年至2005年期间研究全球化与健康社会决定因素之间关系的一些概念性里程碑,然后表明,由于全球化包含多种相互作用的政策动态,因此需要依赖多学科(跨学科性)的证据和研究方法。同样,也需要明确认识到将全球化(典型的“上游”变量)与健康社会决定因素及健康结果的变化联系起来所涉及的不确定性。