The Political Future of Social Medicine: Reflections on Physicians as Activists

被引:16
|
作者
Geiger, H. Jack [1 ]
机构
[1] CUNY, Sch Med, Commun Med, New York, NY 10031 USA
关键词
STRUCTURAL COMPETENCE; HEALTH; STUDENTS;
D O I
10.1097/ACM.0000000000001538
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
The academic discipline of social medicine has always had a political and policy advocacy component, in addition to its core functions of research and teaching. Its origins lie in the 18th and 19th centuries, in the work of Johann Peter Frank and Rudolph Virchow, among others. Virchow's dictum that "politics is nothing else but medicine on a large scale" highlights that most social determinants of health are politically determined and shape population health. Yet despite intense epidemiological and sociological research on the social determinants of health, less attention has been paid to this political and policy dimension. During the 1960s, the author and many other clinicians were directly involved in attempts to use health care institutions to foster structural change. However, the author argues that efforts to assist individual patients and more effectively manage their interactions with the health care system, as described in the articles in this issue's special collection on "structural competency," while worthy and useful, do not confront root causes. Going forward, efforts to effect structural change must take place outside the arena of the clinical encounter and involve interprofessional teams and collaborations with nongovernmental organizations. They should intervene directly on the structures that contribute to illness such as poor housing, income and wealth inequality, inferior education, racism and residential segregation, and toxic concentrations of extreme poverty in urban areas. Collectively, these efforts-within and outside the spheres of medicine-represent the real operative form of structural competency.
引用
收藏
页码:282 / 284
页数:3
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Back to the Future: Reflections on the History of the Future of Family Medicine
    Doohan, Noemi C.
    Endres, Jill
    Koehn, Nerissa
    Miller, John
    Scherger, Joseph E.
    Martin, James
    Devoe, Jennifer E.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN BOARD OF FAMILY MEDICINE, 2014, 27 (06) : 839 - 845
  • [2] Additional qualification "Social medicine" for physicians
    Weisshaar, Elke
    DERMATOLOGIE, 2024, 75 (05): : 400 - 403
  • [3] Training future physicians in the era of genomic medicine: trends in undergraduate medical genetics education
    Plunkett-Rondeau, Jevon
    Hyland, Katherine
    Dasgupta, Shoumita
    GENETICS IN MEDICINE, 2015, 17 (11) : 927 - 934
  • [4] Reflections: A Social Emergency Medicine Call to Arms: Promoting the Adoption of Social Emergency Medicine Practices
    Schneberk, Todd
    Cooper, Richelle J.
    ANNALS OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2019, 74 (05) : S17 - S18
  • [5] Developing Future Academic Physicians: the Academic Medicine Scholars Program
    Granat, Lauren M.
    Weinstein, Anna
    Seltzer, Emily
    Goldstein, Leslie
    Mihlbachler, Matthew
    Chan, Thomas
    Saggio, Gregory
    MEDICAL SCIENCE EDUCATOR, 2020, 30 (02) : 705 - 711
  • [6] Reflections: Addressing the Quadruple Aim in Social Emergency Medicine
    Karb, Rebecca
    Natsui, Shaw
    ANNALS OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2019, 74 (05) : S31 - S32
  • [7] The Future of Chronic Disease Management and the Role of Sport and Exercise Medicine Physicians
    Batt, Mark E.
    Tanji, Jeffrey L.
    CLINICAL JOURNAL OF SPORT MEDICINE, 2011, 21 (01): : 3 - 5
  • [8] Global Social Medicine for an Equitable and Just Future
    Pinones-Rivera, Carlos
    Martinez-Hernaez, Angel
    Morse, Michelle E.
    Nambiar, Kavya
    Ferrall, Joel
    Holmes, Seth M.
    HEALTH AND HUMAN RIGHTS, 2023, 25 (01) : 1 - 8
  • [9] Social media use by physicians: a qualitative study of the new frontier of medicine
    Campbell, Lauren
    Evans, Yolanda
    Pumper, Megan
    Moreno, Megan A.
    BMC MEDICAL INFORMATICS AND DECISION MAKING, 2016, 16
  • [10] Behavioral medicine, cancer control, and NCI: reflections on a fruitful past and auspicious future
    Klein, William M. P.
    TRANSLATIONAL BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE, 2021, 11 (11) : 2065 - 2069