Thinking With and Against the Social Determinants of Health: The Latin American Social Medicine (Collective Health) Critique from Jaime Breilh

 

Authors
Harvey, Michael; Piñones-Rivera, Carlos; Holmes, Seth M.
Format
Article
Status
publishedVersion
Description

The concept of the social determinants of health has become increasingly accepted and mainstream in anglophone public health over the past three decades. Moreover, it has been widely adopted into diverse geographic, sociocultural, and linguistic contexts. By recognizing the role of social conditions in influencing health inequalities, the concept challenges narrow behavioral and reductive biological understandings of health. Despite this, scholars and activists have critiqued the concept of the social determinants of health for being incomplete and even misrepresenting the true nature of health inequities. Arguably, these critiques have been most thoroughly developed among those working in the Latin American social medicine and collective health traditions who formulated the “social determination of health” paradigm and the concept of interculturality decades prior to the advent of the social determinants of health. We draw on Jaime Breilh’s main works, with a focus on the recently published book, Critical Epidemiology and the People’s Health, to (1) provide a broad overview of the social determination of health paradigm and its approach to interculturality and (2) clarify how these ideas and the broader collective health movement challenge assumptions within the social determinants of health concept.

Publication Year
2022
Language
eng
Topic
DETERMINANTES SOCIALES
MEDICINA SOCIAL
EPIDEMIOLOGÍA CRÍTICA
BREILH PAZ Y MIÑO, JAIME, 1947-
INTERCULTURALIDAD
SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH
HEALTH INEQUITY
Repository
Repositorio Universidad Andina Simón Bolivar
Get full text
http://hdl.handle.net/10644/9379
Rights
openAccess
License
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional