Shankar Anita, Sundar Siddhi, Smith Genevieve
Department of Environmental Health and Engineering, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
J Behav Health Serv Res. 2019 Jan;46(1):164-176. doi: 10.1007/s11414-018-9592-0.
This paper outlines the critical role of personal agency in influencing health and development outcomes and presents a framework for implementing non-therapeutic cognitive-behavioral interventions that foster agency, especially for women, in resource-poor settings. The United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) has placed "empowerment" at the center of global targets, particularly to improve individuals' health and development. Despite extensive research on individual and community empowerment, there is limited focus on the role of psychological and behavioral approaches directly fostering individual and collective agency in health programs. Fundamental to this process is the understanding that decision-making is an interaction between mental processes and one's current context. Approaches that allow individuals to understand how their beliefs, values, emotions, and thoughts impact their behaviors and can be modulated to increase their personal agency are needed. This model is illustrated through a pilot behavioral intervention with women engaged in sex work in Pune, India, demonstrating substantive benefits.
本文概述了个人能动性在影响健康和发展成果方面的关键作用,并提出了一个实施非治疗性认知行为干预措施的框架,该干预措施旨在培养能动性,特别是在资源匮乏地区针对女性培养能动性。联合国可持续发展目标(SDGs)已将“赋权”置于全球目标的核心位置,尤其是为了改善个人的健康和发展。尽管对个人和社区赋权进行了广泛研究,但在健康项目中,直接培养个人和集体能动性的心理和行为方法的作用却很少受到关注。这一过程的基础是理解决策是心理过程与个人当前环境之间的一种互动。需要有一些方法让个人了解他们的信念、价值观、情感和思想如何影响其行为,以及如何进行调节以增强其个人能动性。通过在印度浦那对从事性工作的女性进行的一项试点行为干预对该模式进行了阐释,结果显示出了显著益处。