“We don’t tell people what to do”: Ethical practice and Indigenous health promotion


Autoria(s): McPhail-Bell, Karen; Bond, Chelsea; Brough, Mark; Fredericks, Bronwyn L.
Data(s)

01/07/2015

Resumo

Health promotion aspires to work in empowering, participatory ways, with the goal of supporting people to increase control over their health. However, buried in this goal is an ethical tension: while increasing people’s autonomy, health promotion also imposes a particular, health promotion-sanctioned version of what is good. This tension positions practitioners precariously, where the ethos of empowerment risks increasing health promotion’s paternalistic control over people, rather than people’s control over their own health. Here in we argue that this ethical tension is amplified in Indigenous Australia, where colonial processes of control over Indigenous lands, lives and cultures are indistinguishable from contemporary health promotion ‘interventions’. Moreover, the potential stigmatisation produced in any paternalistic acts ‘done for their own good’ cannot be assumed to have evaporated within the self-proclaimed ‘empowering’ narratives of health promotion. This issue’s guest editor’s call for health promotion to engage ‘with politics and with philosophical ideas about the state and the citizen’ is particularly relevant in an Indigenous Australian context. Indigenous Australians continue to experience health promotion as a moral project of control through intervention, which contradicts health promotion’s central goal of empowerment. Therefore, Indigenous health promotion is an invaluable site for discussion and analysis of health promotion’s broader ethical tensions. Given the persistent and alarming Indigenous health inequalities, this paper calls for systematic ethical reflection in order to redress health promotion’s general failure to reduce health inequalities experienced by Indigenous Australians.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/91614/

Publicador

CSIRO Publishing

Relação

DOI:10.1071/HE15048

McPhail-Bell, Karen, Bond, Chelsea, Brough, Mark, & Fredericks, Bronwyn L. (2015) “We don’t tell people what to do”: Ethical practice and Indigenous health promotion. Health Promotion Journal of Australia, 26(3), pp. 195-199.

Direitos

Copyright 2015 Australian Health Promotion Association

Fonte

Division of Research and Commercialisation; Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; Indigenous Studies Research Network; School of Public Health & Social Work

Palavras-Chave #111700 PUBLIC HEALTH AND HEALTH SERVICES #111701 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health #111712 Health Promotion #Aboriginal #Torres Strait Islander #Indigenous #health promotion #ethical practice #empowering #participatory #intervention #decolonisation #urban #research #Institute of Urban Indigenous Health
Tipo

Journal Article