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The past as present in health promotion: the case for a ‘public health humanities’

Version 2 2024-10-19, 23:03
Version 1 2024-01-04, 03:46
journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-19, 23:03 authored by Thomas J Kehoe, Andrew May, Carolyn HolbrookCarolyn Holbrook, Richie BarkerRichie Barker, David Hill, Hayley Jones, Rob Moodie, Andrekos Varnava, Ann Westmore
Abstract Health promotion is conceived as a unifying concept for improving the health of populations. This means addressing the socio-cultural, economic and commercial causes of ill-health, which are necessarily informed by past policies and socio-cultural contexts. However, historical scholarship has rarely figured in health promotion practice or scholarship. This gap resides in the determinants of health, and notably in the analyses of tobacco control and skin cancer prevention, two long-running campaigns that have shaped modern health promotion in Australia. Both highlight a need for understanding the profound impact of history on the present and the value of learning from past successes and failures. Doing so requires integrating historical analyses into existing health promotion scholarship. To achieve this aim, we present a new ‘public health humanities’ methodology. This novel interdisciplinary framework is conceived as a spectrum in which historical studies integrate with existing health promotion disciplines to solve complex health problems. We draw on the many calls for more interdisciplinarity in health promotion and derive this methodology from proposals in the medical humanities and cognate fields that have wrestled with combining history and present-focused disciplines. Using tobacco control and skin cancer prevention as case studies, we demonstrate how public health humanities uses interdisciplinary teams and shared research questions to generate valuable new knowledge unavailable with traditional methods. Furthermore, we show how it creates evaluation criteria to consider the powerful impact of issues like colonialism on current inequities that hinder health promotion strategies, and from which lessons may be derived for the future.

History

Journal

Health Promotion International

Volume

38

Article number

daad163

Pagination

1-13

Location

Oxford, Eng.

ISSN

0957-4824

eISSN

1460-2245

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

6

Publisher

Oxford University Press

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