Community health promotion and disaster recovery: a PhotoVoice project in Comerío, Puerto Rico.

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Arts & Health Pub Date : 2024-12-28 DOI:10.1080/17533015.2024.2445030
Mark Padilla, Samuel Olah, Armando Matiz, Janice Soliván-Roig, Josely Bravo González, José Frau Canabal, María J Rodríguez Torrado, Emmanuel Rivera Méndez, N Emel Ganapati, Divya Chandrasekhar, Ivis García, Robert B Olshansky
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Abstract

Background: PhotoVoice - a series of workshops involving participatory photography and narrative-building - was employed in the rural town of Comerío, Puerto Rico (PR) to describe disaster recovery in a rural setting and foster policy dialogue.

Methods: Using PhotoVoice workshops and ethnographic observations, the project describes how women affiliated with a local community-based organization described the priorities for disaster recovery in visual images and narratives. We draw analytically upon theories of intersectionality and coloniality to describe socio-structural and community factors that shape community health in the context of ongoing disasters.

Results: Analysis indicated that gender and generational differences are key intersecting factors that mediate adaptation to disasters in this setting.

Conclusions: The project, which has already shown impacts on local policy decisions, demonstrates the possibilities of using PhotoVoice to foster community-driven crisis responses and policy dialogue that can shape health promotion and disaster recovery responses in PR and elsewhere.

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促进社区健康和灾后恢复:波多黎各Comerío的PhotoVoice项目。
背景:PhotoVoice在波多黎各(PR)的乡村小镇Comerío举办了一系列涉及参与摄影和叙事的工作坊,旨在描述乡村环境中的灾难恢复,并促进政策对话。方法:利用PhotoVoice研讨会和人种学观察,该项目描述了当地社区组织的妇女如何以视觉图像和叙事方式描述灾后恢复的优先事项。我们分析借鉴交集和殖民理论,以描述在持续灾害的背景下塑造社区健康的社会结构和社区因素。结果:分析表明,性别和代际差异是调解这种情况下对灾害适应的关键交叉因素。结论:该项目已经显示出对地方政策决定的影响,表明了利用PhotoVoice促进社区驱动的危机应对和政策对话的可能性,这些危机应对和政策对话可以影响公共关系和其他地方的健康促进和灾难恢复应对。
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来源期刊
Arts & Health
Arts & Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
14.30%
发文量
12
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