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Public Health Liberation is dedicated to elevating public health to be aligned with everyday experiences with health. This includes creative expression, news aggregation, and storytelling. We believe that pathways for improved community health is deeply embedded in being receptive and responsive to diverse human expression, communication, and needs. Public Health Liberation deeply values the indispensable role and contribution of women as the gateway for achieving health equity.

We want to share your story on health and well-being. We accept all perspectives and creative forms. We just require that your work is original and publishable on our website. We can also link to sources that you find compelling and relevant. Email info@publichealthliberation.com

Shared Historical Trauma – Weathering, Numbing and Reality
Chris Williams Chris Williams

Shared Historical Trauma – Weathering, Numbing and Reality

By Dr. Jim Deutsch

We all hear about the increasing burnout and “moral injury” in healthcare workers resulting from the current contradictions in healthcare and public health. About the feelings of helplessness in encountering individual trauma and suffering. At the same time, how do we healthcare providers make good use of our indignation at the obvious impacts of the systemic wrongs, blindness, and injustices? How can we turn cynicism and pessimism at the transparent prioritizing of profits and power over prevention and protection? Healthcare and the people we serve continue to be commodified as “value” to be extracted from bodies.

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PHL Board Member Ebony Moody Centers Black Women’s Perspectives in New Anthology
Chris Williams Chris Williams

PHL Board Member Ebony Moody Centers Black Women’s Perspectives in New Anthology

Public Health Liberation Board Member Ebony Moody recently published an anthology of Black women’s life experiences. Black Women Win: Stories to Celebrate, Honor Salute, and Acknowledge Black Women presents ten amazing women who journeyed from tragedy to triumph. Representing many facets and walks of life, this anthology embodies tales of love, trauma, and victory. These stories uplift and showcase Black women’s successes and immense sacrifices that have been unseen, unheard, and swept under the rug for centuries. Sharing these stories breaks the chains of shame and guilt and opens paths of healing, gratitude and holistic health. This book was written to inspire women across the globe to pursue their heart-filled dreams and to defy the odds.

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Public Health Liberation – An Emerging Transdiscipline to Elucidate and Transform the Public Health Economy
Chris Williams Chris Williams

Public Health Liberation – An Emerging Transdiscipline to Elucidate and Transform the Public Health Economy

Public Health Liberation (PHL) is an innovative general theory of public health aimed at accelerating health equity. This paper provides a rich synthesis of philosophical traditions, novel theories, and approaches to establish the basis for a new public health transdiscipline. The authors argue that the "public health economy" as a single analytic lens elucidates the contradictions and tensions that reproduce vast health inequity. Authored by a majority of Black women, community experiences and perspectives are a major strength of this paper because they draw upon leadership experiences with contemporary issues.

The authors begin by describing their background in public health advocacy and by demonstrating the need for PHL using lead-contaminated water crises from Flint, Michigan and Washington, DC. They discuss the benefits of horizontal and vertical integration that broaden public health discourse to include affected populations and that seek opportunities throughout the public health economy. Their philosophical and theoretical reasoning reinterprets and adopts disciplinary concepts in political theory, sociology, women's studies, African American emancipatory writing, anti-racism, and community psychology to form a culturally relevant worldview and cogent thesis. Several new constructs emerge that do not appear elsewhere in the literature - Gaze of the Enslaved, Morality Principle, liberation, illiberation, liberation safe spaces, public health realism, and hegemony. The authors use their ethical and theoretical assumptions to guide practice and community self-help. Public Health Liberation presents a major challenge to assumptions about public health effectiveness in addressing vast health inequity.

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Rethinking Race and Black History Month- Lessons from US Capital
Chris Williams Chris Williams

Rethinking Race and Black History Month- Lessons from US Capital

This cross-posting from Southwest Voice examines vast racial economic and health disparities in Washington, DC through accommodationist and cultural meanings of race among Black Americans and society. Washington, DC is the site of growing apartheid - a term not used loosely. DC has the highest spending per capita and the highest health spending per capita of any US city while racial differences in income and life expectancy continue to grow. Life expectancy for Blacks is worse than the US overall. The Black population is sizable, equaling the White population. City leadership is majority Black. These trends raise profound questions about the relevance of race and provide insight into barriers to racial equity. If racial inequity is flourishing in Washington, DC, then is the US facing greater headwinds to realize racial equity than public health discourse suggests? This discussion is highly consequential to public health theory and practice.

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Hegemonic Arrangements in the Public Health Economy: Gaining Insight into Motivations and Behaviors
Chris Williams Chris Williams

Hegemonic Arrangements in the Public Health Economy: Gaining Insight into Motivations and Behaviors

The theory of hegemony is a “grand theory” that helps to explain how and why societies are organized the way they are, including maldistribution of resources and mistreatment of certain populations. This essay builds on Antonio Gramsci’s concept of hegemony to examine the performance of the macro- and micro-Public Health Economy. It first provides a brief summary of hegemony, relying heavily on George Hoare and Nathan Sperber’s An introduction to Antonio Gramsci: His Life, Thought and Legacy. It extends this framework to contemporary issues using the author’s extensive community knowledge and experience. It answers questions on why certain populations with shared health burdens and interests might differ in approaches to self-advocacy.

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Creative Arts.

 

“Maybe, we the project”

University professor and poetess PS Perkins reminds us about the humanity and lived experiences of families who live in public housing communities. She read her poem, “When a House is Not a Home” at the PHL National Webinar and Conversation on Liberation Philosophy, Systems Thinking, and Social Determinants of Health.

 

Documentary on Gentrification Captures Community Voices

Prior to starting Public Health Liberation,, Christopher Williams began an unfinished documentary to capture community voices in this gentrifying neighborhood of Washington, DC.

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