Department Public Health, Environments and Society, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, 15-17 Tavistock Place, London WC1H 9SH, UK.
Department of Health Services Research and Policy, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, 15-17 Tavistock Place, London WC1H 9SH, UK.
Public Health. 2023 Sep;222:147-153. doi: 10.1016/j.puhe.2023.07.002. Epub 2023 Aug 4.
Attempts to reduce health inequities in England frequently prioritise some equity dimensions over others. Intersectionality highlights how different dimensions of inequity interconnect and are underpinned by historic and institutionalised power imbalances. We aimed to explore whether intersectionality could help us shed light on young adults' understanding of health inequities.
The study incorporatedqualitative thematic analysis of primary data.
Online focus groups with young adults (n = 25) aged 18-30 living in three English regions (Greater London; South Yorkshire/Midlands; North-East England) between July 2020 and March 2021. Online semistructured interviews (n = 2) and text-based communication was conducted for participants unable to attend online groups.
Young adults described experiencing discrimination, privilege, and power imbalances driving health inequity and suggested ways to address this. Forms of inequity included cumulative, within group, interacting, and the experience of privilege alongside marginalisation. Young adults described discrimination occurring in settings relevant to social determinants of health and said it adversely affected health and well-being.
Intersectionality, with its focus on discrimination and identity, can help public health stakeholders engage with young adults on health equity. An upstream approach to improving health equity should consider multiple and intersecting forms of discrimination along with their cultural and institutional drivers.
在英格兰,减少健康不平等的努力经常优先考虑某些公平维度而不是其他维度。交叉性强调了不平等的不同维度是如何相互关联的,并受到历史和制度化的权力失衡的影响。我们旨在探讨交叉性是否可以帮助我们深入了解年轻人对健康不平等的理解。
该研究纳入了对原始数据的定性主题分析。
2020 年 7 月至 2021 年 3 月,在英格兰三个地区(大伦敦、南约克郡/中部地区、英格兰东北部)居住的 18-30 岁的年轻人(n=25)进行了在线焦点小组。对于无法参加在线小组的参与者,进行了在线半结构化访谈(n=2)和基于文本的交流。
年轻人描述了经历歧视、特权和权力失衡导致健康不平等,并提出了解决这一问题的方法。不平等的形式包括累积、群体内、相互作用以及在边缘化的同时体验特权。年轻人描述了在与健康决定因素相关的环境中发生的歧视,并表示这对健康和福祉产生了不利影响。
交叉性侧重于歧视和身份,可以帮助公共卫生利益相关者与年轻人就健康公平问题进行接触。改善健康公平的上游方法应考虑多种和交叉的歧视形式及其文化和制度驱动因素。