Globalization and Health
Volume 14, Issue 1, 2018

Oppression, liberation, wellbeing, and ecology: Organizing metaphors for understanding health workforce migration and other social determinants of health (Article) (Open Access)

Tankwanchi A.B.S.*
  • a University of the Witswatersrand, DST/NRF SARChi Programme on the Health Workforce, School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, Johannesburg, South Africa

Abstract

Background: The Commission on Social Determinants of Health (CSDH) identifies the maldistribution of power, money, and resources as main drivers of health inequities. The CSDH further observes that tackling these drivers effectively requires interventions to focus at local, national, and global levels. Consistent with the CSDH's observation, this paper describes the eco-psychopolitical validity (EPV) paradigm, a multilevel and transdisciplinary model for research and action, thus far insufficiently tapped, but with the potential to systematize the exploration of the social determinants of health. Results: Using the physician migration from Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) to the United States as illustration, this paper articulates how the EPV model can be applied to the systematic analysis of a complex social problem with health inequity implications. To help explore potential determinants of physician migration, a comprehensive coding matrix is developed; with the organizing metaphors of the EPV model-namely oppression, liberation, and wellbeing-serving as analytical categories. Through the lens of the EPV model, migrating physicians are revealed as both ecological subjects enmeshed in a vast web of transnational processes linking source and destination countries, and potential change agents pursuing liberation and wellbeing. While migration may expand the opportunities of émigré physicians, it is argued that, the pursuit of wellbeing by way of migration cannot fully materialize abroad without some efforts to return home, physically or socially. Conclusion: Clarifying the relationship between various social determinants of health and health inequities at different levels of analysis is a more complex but essential endeavor to knowledge generation than using a one-dimensional frame. With its roots in interdisciplinary thinking and its emphasis on both individual and contextual factors, the EPV paradigm holds promise as a model for examining the social determinants of health. © 2018 The Author(s).

Author Keywords

social determinants of health Psychopolitical validity Health inequities Oppression Ecological model Liberation Transdisciplinary Interdisciplinary Health workforce migration wellbeing empowerment

Index Keywords

Models, Psychological validity ecology Metaphor psychological model Africa south of the Sahara Foreign Professional Personnel Sub-Saharan Africa literature health disparity Health Status Disparities human wellbeing middle aged statistics and numerical data controlled study social determinants of health Physicians ethnology United States foreign worker quality of life Humans psychology male social problem female Article thinking adult human experiment physician international migration empowerment public health

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85054932476&doi=10.1186%2fs12992-018-0397-y&partnerID=40&md5=f87af1cd7f94d306f6b744d670fc7725

DOI: 10.1186/s12992-018-0397-y
ISSN: 17448603
Cited by: 2
Original Language: English