Global Health Policy Unit, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Int J Equity Health. 2018 Sep 24;17(1):83. doi: 10.1186/s12939-018-0797-x.
Multiple structural, contextual and individual factors determine social disadvantage and affect health experience. There is limited understanding, however, of how this complex system works to shape access to health enabling resources (HER), especially for most marginalised or hard-to-reach populations. As a result, planning continues to be bereft of voices and lived realities of those in the margins. This paper reports on key findings and experience of a participatory action research (PAR) that aimed to deepen understanding of how multiple disadvantages (and structures of oppression) interact to produce difference in access to resources affecting well-being in disadvantaged communities in Edinburgh.
An innovative approach combining intersectionality and PAR was adopted and operationalised in three overlapping phases. A preparatory phase helped establish relationships with participant groups and policy stakeholders, and challenge assumptions underlying the study design. Field-work and analysis was conducted iteratively in two phases: with a range of participants working in policy and community roles (or 'bridge' populations), followed by residents of one Edinburgh locality with relatively high levels of deprivation (As measured by the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation, a geographically-based indicator. See http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/SIMD/DataAnalysis/SPconstituencyprofile/EdinburghNorthern-Leith ). Traditional qualitative methods (interviews, focus groups) alongside participatory methods (health resource mapping, spider-grams, photovoice) were employed to facilitate action-oriented knowledge production among multiply disadvantaged groups.
There was considerable agreement across groups and communities as to what healthful living (in general) means. This entailed a combination of material, environmental, socio-cultural and affective resources including: a sense of belonging and of purpose, feeling valued, self-esteem, safe/secure housing, reliable income, and access to responsive and sensitive health care when needed. Differences emerge in the value placed by people at different social locations on these resources. The conditions/aspects of their living environment that affected their access to and ability to translate these resources into improved health also appeared to vary with social location.
Integrating intersectionality with PAR enables the generation of a fuller understanding of disparities in the distribution of, and access to, HER, notably from the standpoint of those excluded from mainstream policy and planning processes. Employing an intersectionality lens helped illuminate links between individual subjectivities and wider social structures and power relations. PAR on the other hand offered the potential to engage multiply disadvantaged groups in a process to collectively build local knowledge for action to develop healthier communities and towards positive community-led social change.
多种结构性、情境性和个体性因素决定了社会劣势,并影响健康体验。然而,人们对于这个复杂系统如何运作以塑造获取健康促进资源(HER)的方式知之甚少,尤其是对于那些最边缘化或难以接触到的人群。因此,规划仍然缺乏处于边缘地位的人们的声音和生活现实。本文报告了一项参与式行动研究(PAR)的主要发现和经验,该研究旨在深入了解多种劣势(和压迫结构)如何相互作用,从而在爱丁堡的弱势社区中产生影响福祉的资源获取方面的差异。
采用了一种创新的方法,将交叉性和 PAR 结合起来,在三个重叠的阶段实施。预备阶段有助于与参与者群体和政策利益相关者建立关系,并挑战研究设计背后的假设。在两个阶段中进行了迭代的实地工作和分析:与在政策和社区角色中工作的一系列参与者(或“桥梁”群体)合作,然后与一个具有相对较高贫困水平的爱丁堡地方的居民合作(如苏格兰多重剥夺指数所衡量的,基于地理位置的指标。请访问 http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/SIMD/DataAnalysis/SPconstituencyprofile/EdinburghNorthern-Leith)。传统的定性方法(访谈、焦点小组)与参与性方法(健康资源映射、蜘蛛图、照片声音)一起用于促进多重劣势群体的面向行动的知识生产。
不同群体和社区对健康生活(一般而言)的含义达成了相当大的共识。这需要将物质、环境、社会文化和情感资源结合起来,包括:归属感和使命感、有价值感、自尊心、安全/有保障的住房、可靠的收入,以及在需要时获得响应和敏感的医疗保健。处于不同社会地位的人对这些资源的重视程度存在差异。影响他们获取和将这些资源转化为改善健康的能力的生活环境条件/方面,似乎也因社会地位而异。
将交叉性与 PAR 相结合,可以更全面地了解 HER 分配和获取方面的差异,特别是从被排除在主流政策和规划过程之外的人的角度。采用交叉性视角有助于阐明个体主观性与更广泛的社会结构和权力关系之间的联系。另一方面,PAR 提供了一种可能性,可以让多重劣势群体参与到一个集体构建地方知识的过程中,以促进更健康的社区,并朝着积极的社区主导的社会变革发展。