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11 - Preventive social work intervention and health promotion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 July 2022

Paul Bywaters
Affiliation:
Coventry University
Eileen McLeod
Affiliation:
University of Warwick
Lindsey Napier
Affiliation:
The University of Sydney
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Summary

Introduction

One dimension of social work's contribution to tackling health inequalities is to focus on preventive interventions which both build and build on the resources of disadvantaged local communities to benefit their health. This chapter offers three contrasting examples of this kind of intervention drawn from very different social contexts in Australia, China and Hong Kong. These show how social workers, acting alongside public health and other professionals, can develop and support grassroots action for better health by members of geographical communities and communities of interest in the face of the rapid social, economic and environmental changes accelerated by globalisation.

Section 11.1 analyses the context in which Indigenous Australians experience an average life expectancy of some 17 years less than that of the majority population (CSDH, 2008). A substantial distrust of social workers and health professionals has resulted from their involvement in oppressive and discriminatory social policies including the removal of children. However, this analysis of a group work intervention based on a transdisciplinary, Family Wellbeing empowerment programme shows that social workers can help to strengthen Indigenous people's own sense of control and their capacity to take prominent roles in local public policy making with the aim of reducing health damage.

Section 11.2 discusses a joint Canadian–Chinese development programme, particularly focused on women's health, in rural Mongolia where one response to poverty has been a large-scale exodus of men to seek work in cities. Rooted in a training programme based on basic social work methods and values, this project recruited local women to be leaders in health education and promotion work with a number of expected and unexpected consequences. Trainers came to recognise the expertise of rural women in analysing and addressing the barriers they face to health, including the inadequacy of health care provision. This has produced a shift in the approach of the All China Women's Federation to its task of nationwide health promotion.

Finally, Section 11.3 reports on an intervention to build health-related social capital in Hong Kong through the Community Investment and Inclusion Fund, with social work leaders. Although a strategic intervention led by the Fund's managers, the core principle of the model was the building of social capital through a fundamental change in welfare approach from service provision to participatory grassroots action.

Type
Chapter
Information
Social Work and Global Health Inequalities
Practice and Policy Developments
, pp. 163 - 190
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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