Spiegel Jerry M, Breilh Jaime, Yassi Annalee
School of Population and Public Health, Department of Medicine, the University of British Columbia, Rm. 430 - 2206 East Mall, Vancouver, V6T 1Z3, BC, Canada.
Health Sciences Area, University Andina Simon Bolivar, Quito, Ecuador.
Global Health. 2015 Feb 27;11:9. doi: 10.1186/s12992-015-0091-2.
Focus on "social determinants of health" provides a welcome alternative to the bio-medical illness paradigm. However, the tendency to concentrate on the influence of "risk factors" related to living and working conditions of individuals, rather than to more broadly examine dynamics of the social processes that affect population health, has triggered critical reaction not only from the Global North but especially from voices the Global South where there is a long history of addressing questions of health equity. In this article, we elaborate on how focusing instead on the language of "social determination of health" has prompted us to attempt to apply a more equity-sensitive approaches to research and related policy and praxis.
In this debate, we briefly explore the epistemological and historical roots of epidemiological approaches to health and health equity that have emerged in Latin America to consider its relevance to global discourse. In this region marked by pronounced inequity, context-sensitive concepts such as "collective health" and "critical epidemiology" have been prominent, albeit with limited acknowledgement by the Global North. We illustrate our attempts to apply a social determination approach (and the "4 S" elements of bio-Security, Sovereignty, Solidarity and Sustainability) in five projects within our research collaboration linking researchers and knowledge users in Ecuador and Canada, in diverse settings (health of healthcare workers; food systems; antibiotic resistance; vector borne disease [dengue]; and social circus with street youth).
We argue that the language of social determinants lends itself to research that is more reductionist and beckons the development of different skills than would be applied when adopting the language of social determination. We conclude that this language leads to more direct analysis of the systemic factors that drive, promote and reinforce disparities, while at the same time directly considering the emancipatory forces capable of countering negative health impacts. It follows that "reverse innovation" must not only recognize practical solutions being developed in low and middle income countries, but must also build on the strengths of the theoretical-methodological reasoning that has emerged in the South.
关注“健康的社会决定因素”为生物医学疾病范式提供了一种受欢迎的替代方案。然而,倾向于关注与个人生活和工作条件相关的“风险因素”的影响,而不是更广泛地审视影响人群健康的社会过程动态,这不仅引发了来自全球北方的批评反应,尤其是来自全球南方的声音,在那里解决健康公平问题有着悠久的历史。在本文中,我们阐述了关注“健康的社会决定因素”这一表述如何促使我们尝试将更具公平敏感性的方法应用于研究及相关政策与实践。
在这场辩论中,我们简要探讨了拉丁美洲出现的健康与健康公平流行病学方法的认识论和历史根源,以考量其与全球话语的相关性。在这个以明显不平等为特征的地区,诸如“集体健康”和“批判性流行病学”等因地制宜的概念一直很突出,尽管全球北方对此的认可有限。我们展示了我们在厄瓜多尔和加拿大研究合作的五个项目中尝试应用社会决定因素方法(以及生物安全、主权、团结和可持续性的“4S”要素)的情况,这些项目涉及不同背景(医护人员健康;食品系统;抗生素耐药性;病媒传播疾病[登革热];以及与街头青年的社会马戏活动)。
我们认为,社会决定因素的表述更倾向于简化论的研究,并且需要发展与采用社会决定论表述时不同的技能。我们得出结论,这种表述能够更直接地分析导致、促进和加剧差异的系统性因素,同时直接考虑能够对抗负面健康影响的解放力量。因此,“逆向创新”不仅必须认可低收入和中等收入国家正在开发的实际解决方案,还必须基于南方出现的理论 - 方法论推理的优势。