Crisis Discourse in Human Resources for Health: A Move Towards Securitization?

被引:0
|
作者
de Vries, Daniel H. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Amsterdam, Anthropol Hlth, Amsterdam, Netherlands
关键词
crisis; Human Resources for Health (HRH); discourse; HIV/AIDS; securitization; emergency management; USAID Capacity Project; WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT; MEDICAL MANPOWER; HIV/AIDS; SECURITY; AIDS; PROVIDERS; CANADA; CARE;
D O I
10.17730/0018-7259.77.3.249
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
Since the 1960s, a persistent shortage of health workers has led professionals managing Human Resources for Health (HRH) to frame their field as in "crisis." Since the HIV/AIDS epidemic, this discourse has coincided with a general securitization of global health. I explore the extent to which crisis discourse in HRH potentially signifies securitization of HRH using a narrative review of 153 articles from the PubMed database and a case study of a global, USAID-funded HRH strengthening partnership (The Capacity Project). Findings show a marked discursive shift after a 2004 collaborative report by the " Joint Learning Initiative," which led to increased and normalized crisis discourse focusing on the threat of systemic collapse. Programmatically, this shift enabled an emergency-oriented technical approach focusing on high-level solutions that increase efficiency and surveillance and establish a new type of emergency manager: the global HRH crisis expert. I argue that the discourse of crisis may be pushing HRH towards fast-track action scenarios common to securitization, potentially closing the door to community-oriented or upstream approaches. Anthropologists or other social scientists working with local communities should monitor these developments and become active participants in HRH steering groups or political-legal bodies to support upstream and alternative (non-biomedical) solutions, such as community health resources.
引用
收藏
页码:249 / 261
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The Ukraine Crisis: Mental Health Resources for Clinicians and Researchers
    Shevlin, Mark
    Hyland, Philip
    Karatzias, Thanos
    Makhashvili, Nino
    Javakhishvili, Jana
    Roberts, Bayard
    JOURNAL OF LOSS & TRAUMA, 2023, 28 (02): : 161 - 163
  • [42] The Ukraine crisis: Mental health resources for clinicians and researchers
    Shevlin, Mark
    Hyland, Philip
    Karatzias, Thanos
    Makhashvili, Nino
    Javakhishvili, Jana
    Roberts, Bayard
    CLINICAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY, 2022, 27 (03) : 521 - 523
  • [43] Public coping discourse in response to government health crisis communication
    Wiese, Melanie
    Van Der Westhuizen, Liezl-Marie
    CORPORATE COMMUNICATIONS, 2023, 28 (07) : 44 - 67
  • [44] Health care human resources
    Smith, Eldon R.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY, 2007, 23 (03) : 235 - 236
  • [45] Governance and human resources for health
    Marjolein Dieleman
    Thea Hilhorst
    Human Resources for Health, 9
  • [46] Cardiovascular health human resources
    Smith, Eldon R.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY, 2006, 22 (11) : 897 - 898
  • [47] Governance and human resources for health
    Dieleman, Marjolein
    Hilhorst, Thea
    HUMAN RESOURCES FOR HEALTH, 2011, 9
  • [48] Human resources for health in the Americas
    Fraser, Barbara
    LANCET, 2007, 369 (9557): : 179 - 180
  • [49] HUMAN-RESOURCES FOR HEALTH
    VANDERLINDE, I
    SOUTH AFRICAN MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1995, 85 (03): : A17 - A18
  • [50] Human resources for health reply
    Mandeville, Kate L.
    Lagarde, Mylene
    Hanson, Kara
    Mills, Anne
    LANCET, 2016, 388 (10063): : 2994 - 2994