University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Detroit Hispanic Development Corporation, Detroit, MI, USA.
Health Educ Behav. 2020 Aug;47(4):519-524. doi: 10.1177/1090198120929985. Epub 2020 May 14.
In this Perspective, we build on social justice and emancipatory traditions within the field of health education, and the field's long-standing commitment to building knowledge and shared power to promote health equity, to examine lessons and opportunities for health education emerging from the COVID-19 pandemic. Examining patterns that emerged as the pandemic unfolded in Metropolitan Detroit, with disproportionate impacts on African American and low-income communities, we consider conditions that contributed to excess exposure, mortality, and reduced access to critical health protective resources. Using a life course framework, we consider enduring impacts of the pandemic for health equity. Finally, we suggest several strategic actions in three focal areas-environment, occupation, and housing-that can be taken by health educators working in partnership with community members, researchers, and decision makers, using, for example, a community-based participatory research approach, to reduce adverse impacts of COVID-19 and promote long-term equity in health.
在本观点文章中,我们借鉴了健康教育领域中的社会正义和解放传统,以及该领域长期以来致力于构建知识和共享权力以促进健康公平的传统,来审视 COVID-19 大流行带来的健康教育的经验教训和机会。通过审视大流行在底特律大都市展开时所呈现的模式,我们注意到非裔美国人和低收入社区受到不成比例的影响,考虑到导致过度暴露、死亡和减少获得关键健康保护资源的条件。我们使用生命历程框架来考虑大流行对健康公平的持久影响。最后,我们建议在环境、职业和住房这三个重点领域采取几项战略行动,这些行动可以由与社区成员、研究人员和决策者合作的健康教育工作者采取,例如使用基于社区的参与式研究方法,以减少 COVID-19 的不利影响,并促进长期健康公平。