Publication | Closed Access
Why Culture Matters in Health Interventions
140
Citations
54
References
2013
Year
Public Health InterventionsHealth DisparitiesCultural FactorSocial Determinants Of HealthHealth CommunicationPublic HealthPublic Health InterventionCultural PracticeHealth PolicyHealth InterventionHealth PromotionHealth EquityCultural SensitivityCultureCultural PracticesGlobal HealthHealth BehaviorCulture MattersSocial EpidemiologyCulture ChangeArts
Theories about health behavior are commonly used in public health and often frame problems as ascribed or related to individuals' actions or inaction. This framing suggests that poor health occurs because individuals are unable or unwilling to heed preventive messages or recommended treatment actions. The recent United Nations call for strategies to reduce the global disease burden of noncommunicable diseases like diabetes requires a reassessment of individual-based approaches to behavior change. We argue that public health and health behavior intervention should focus more on culture than behavior to achieve meaningful and sustainable change resulting in positive health outcomes. To change negative health behaviors, one must first identify and promote positive health behaviors within the cultural logic of its contexts. To illustrate these points, we discuss stigma associated with obesity and human immunodeficiency virus and acquired immune deficiency syndrome. We conclude that focusing on positive behaviors and sustaining cultural and personal transformations requires a culturally grounded approach to public health interventions, such as that provided by the PEN-3 model.
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