Publication | Open Access
How Do We Explain the Social, Political, and Economic Determinants of Health? A Call for the Inclusion of Social Theories of Health Inequality Within U.S.-Based Public Health Pedagogy
21
Citations
52
References
2020
Year
Critical Public HealthRacial Health EquityEconomic DeterminantsSocial DeterminantsHealth DisparitiesHealth PoliticsSchool HealthSocial Determinants Of HealthSocial TheoriesHealth InequalityCommunity Health Sciences Health DisparitiesSocial HealthPublic Health PracticeHealth InequityPublic HealthA CallHealth EducationHealth SciencesCommunity Health Sciences Intervention ScienceHealth PolicyHealth PromotionSocial ClassNew Educational CompetenciesHealth EquityPublic Health PolicyHealth EconomicsSociologyHealth BehaviorSocial EpidemiologyPublic Health PedagogyMedicine
New public health educational competencies include the ability to explain social phenomena—such as politics, globalization, and racism—and their relationship to health and disease. Formal explanations of social phenomena call for social theory. However, public health pedagogy is principally concerned with behavioral theory. This piece surveys the behavioral theoretical status quo within public health pedagogy and discusses its implication. The concept of “social theories of health inequality”—that is, explanations of health-relevant social phenomena and their role in producing differences in health, morbidity, and mortality—is proposed as one way of fulfilling new educational competencies. Emerging social theories of health inequality are identified and discussed in relation to public health pedagogy.
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