Culture in and culture of health promotion: tensions at the interface of Australian Indigenous health promotion


Autoria(s): McPhail-Bell, Karen; Bond, Chelsea
Data(s)

27/08/2013

Resumo

With persisting health inequalities across and between diverse populations, health promotion must consider its engagement with the culture concept in achieving better health for all. By way of a conversation between an Indigenous and non-Indigenous health promotion practitioner, this unique presentation will critically examine the cultural practice of health promotion for Indigenous Australians. Culture becomes the central tenant of this conversation – but not culture in the sense of something to “fix” to improve Indigenous health, or import to make mainstream practices “culturally appropriate”. Rather, the somewhat invisible culture of Australian health promotion practice itself is highlighted. The enthusiasm of mainstream health promotion practice for risk and reductionism supplants biological determinism with a cultural determinism that constructs culture as illness-producing. This is in contrast to Indigenous perspectives of culture in which it is described as integral to individual and community health and well-being. Whilst empowerment features strongly within global health promotion discourses, the preoccupation of health promotion with the inherent deficit/behavioural change approach is an all too convenient distraction from the broader structural factors impacting on the health of Indigenous Australians. That Indigenous Australians have not benefitted from successful public health policy interventions in the same way as the general population is in itself revealing of the culture of health promotion practice in Australia and it is somewhat ironic that the health promotion fraternity seems not to have questioned its own practice. This conversation aims to encourage health promotion practitioners, researchers and policy makers to interrogate the cultural assumptions of their own practice and of the public health system they are part of and consider how to embed and empower the voices and experiences of those who are ‘culturally othered’ within health promotion practice.

Formato

other

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/62455/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/62455/1/Prezi.exe

McPhail-Bell, Karen & Bond, Chelsea (2013) Culture in and culture of health promotion: tensions at the interface of Australian Indigenous health promotion. In (Ed.) World Conference on Health Promotion, 25-29 August 2013, Pattaya, Thailand. (Unpublished)

Direitos

Copyright 2013 The Authors

Fonte

Chancellery; Faculty of Health; School of Public Health & Social Work

Palavras-Chave #111700 PUBLIC HEALTH AND HEALTH SERVICES #111712 Health Promotion #Health promotion #Culture #Indigenous #Reflexivity #Empowerment
Tipo

Conference Item