How can we teach health professionals, who are among the most privileged in American society, to best serve those who are the least privileged in American society? Power, Privilege, and Public Health in the United States discusses the ways in which power and privilege along intersectional axes of race, gender, sexual orientation, ability, and other characteristics show up in public health and medicine practice, teaching, and research. It provides foundational knowledge ontheories in power and privilege as well as examples of the ways in which the health and medical fields have been complicit in creating health inequities and maintaining oppressive structures that can be used to understand health distribution, differences, and disparities. To enact change, the contributors tothis text enrich their chapters with practical guidance for developing anti-oppression competencies as well as experiential activities to examine how our own power and privilege influence the design, implementation, and interpretation of health studies and public health practice. In drawing attention to the actors and institutions that have led to inequitable health outcomes, Power, Privilege, and Public Health in the United States does more than simply highlight the problems that plague health in the US; it equips teachers and learners with the tools to enact change, straight from leading experts in academia and public health practice.
List of Figures and Tables; Preface; List of Contributors; Introduction; Power: A Foundational Look; Examining the Coin of Privilege in Health and Healthcare; Health Equity Frameworks for Structural and Behavioral Change; Guiding Principles for Conducting Research with a Health Equity Lens; Privilege and Intersectionality Frameworks in Public Health; Race Theories, Antiracism, and Applications for Health; Why Racial Capitalism and Scientific Racism Threaten Promoting Antiracism and Health Equity in Public Health; Orienting Public Health Pedagogy: Using Anti-oppression Tools for Teaching Privilege and Health; Developing a Social Justice-Informed Curriculum for Public Health and Medicine; Historical and Contemporary Examples of Power, Privilege, and Public Health for Classroom Teaching; Inclusive Classroom and Evaluation Activities: Deconstructing Privilege while Building Coalitions; Index;
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