“Optimizing” Health in the Time of COVID-19: How Neoliberal Health Orientations Dictate Families’ Responses

IF 3 Q1 SOCIOLOGY Socius Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23780231231207638
Hillary Steinberg, Stefanie Mollborn
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Abstract

Neoliberal health orientations that emphasize specific health behaviors provide frameworks for how class-advantaged Americans understand themselves and their health. The family is a consequential pathway for such privilege to be enacted. Using dyadic interviews with U.S. parents and teenagers, the authors explore how families in two middle- to upper-middle-class, health-conscious cities reoriented their beliefs and practices around health in response to coronavirus disease 2019. Neoliberal health orientations were still the logic many families used to approach health, even as public health messaging focused on protecting vulnerable groups. The authors find that before and during the pandemic, teenagers experienced intense pressure to maintain a classed, thin body via diet, participation in sports, and exercise. Families that adhered closely to neoliberal ideals and encouraged these practices felt that their health behaviors boosted immune defenses against coronavirus disease 2019. However, parents and teenagers worried about the worsening of their fitness and diet. The authors discuss implications for public health and inequalities.
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在COVID-19时期“优化”健康:新自由主义健康取向如何决定家庭的反应
强调特定健康行为的新自由主义健康取向为阶级优势的美国人如何理解自己和他们的健康提供了框架。家庭是实现这种特权的重要途径。作者通过对美国父母和青少年的双重采访,探讨了两个中上层中产阶级、注重健康的城市的家庭如何在2019年冠状病毒病的影响下,重新调整他们对健康的信仰和做法。新自由主义的健康取向仍然是许多家庭对待健康的逻辑,即使公共卫生信息的重点是保护弱势群体。作者发现,在大流行之前和期间,青少年承受着通过饮食、参加体育运动和锻炼来保持苗条身材的巨大压力。坚持新自由主义理想并鼓励这些做法的家庭认为,他们的健康行为增强了对2019年冠状病毒病的免疫防御。然而,家长和青少年担心他们的健康和饮食的恶化。作者讨论了对公共健康和不平等的影响。
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来源期刊
Socius
Socius Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
6.70%
发文量
84
审稿时长
8 weeks
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