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El. knyga: Well-Being as a Multidimensional Concept: Understanding Connections among Culture, Community, and Health

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Well-Being as a Multidimensional Concept highlights the ways that culture and community influence concepts of wellness, the experience of well-being, and health outcomes. This book includes both theoretical conceptualizations and practice-based explorations from a multidisciplinary group of contributors, including distinguished, widely celebrated senior experts as well as emerging voices in the fields of health promotion, health research, clinical practice, community engagement, and health system policy. Using a social science approach, the contributors explore the interface among culture, community, and well-being in terms of theory and research frameworks; culture, community, and relationships; food; health systems; and collaboration, policy, messaging, and data. The chapters in this collection provide a broader understanding of well-being and its role as a culturally embedded and multidimensional concept. This collection furthers our ability to apprehend social and cultural constructs and dynamics that influence health and well-being and to better understand factors that contribute to or prevent health disparities.

Recenzijos

This book peels away the gloss and hype about `wellness to give an unvarnished view of the topic from the front lines, delivered with poignancy from those working in the trenches with the most vulnerable among us. Here, the importance of culture and community ring out as different chapter authors reveal perspectives of those who are disabled, infected, addicted, or lonely. Here, youll find the perspective of African-Americans reviving traditional food choices, of indigenous people grappling with historical trauma, of women beset by addiction struggling to keep their children while dealing with intergenerational trauma, and even resident physicians suffering abuse in a stressed, often toxic environment. -- Art Kaufman, University of New Mexico

List of Textboxes, Tables, and Figures
ix
Introduction 1(22)
Janet Page-Reeves
Kara L. McKinney
Section I Theory and Research Frameworks
23(100)
1 Socially Determined? Frameworks for Thinking about Health Equity and Wellness
25(24)
Emily Mendenhall
Lesley Jo Weaver
2 Employing a Cultural Lens to Health Promotion Interventions to Enhance Health Equity
49(26)
Nancy E. Schoenberg
Claire Snell-Rood
3 Community Well-Being, Community Intervention, and Community Development: Changing Community Ecology
75(24)
Edison J. Trickett
Leigh Rauk
4 Culture and Practice in Relational Weil-Being
99(24)
Jean Schensul
Section II Culture, Community, and Relationships
123(90)
5 The Allure of Community: The Ethical Journey of People Living with HIV Disease in Philadelphia
125(20)
Jeff Maskovsky
6 "Free Our People": A Disability Studies Perspective on Well-Being
145(16)
Andrew Marcum
7 Finding the "Culture" in Acculturation: Cultural Consonance and Health among Mexican Immigrant Women in Alabama
161(18)
Courtney Andrews
8 Health and Well-Being among Native American Indigenous Peoples
179(14)
Valarie Blue Bird Jernigan
Rodney C. Haring
9 "Speak your mind and heart in the Indian way": Wellness and Agency among American Indian Elders
193(20)
Elise Trott Jaramillo
Cathleen E. Willging
Emily Haozous
Steven P. Verney
Erik Lujan
Section III Food
213(76)
10 Starved for Company: Rural Seniors, Social Isolation, Food Charity, and Impact on Community Well-Being
215(22)
Alicia Edwards
Janet Page-Reeves
11 Technological Approaches to Food-Related Health Equity
237(34)
Andrea G. Parker
12 Food Sovereignty and Wellness in Urban African American Communities
271(18)
Anthony Ryan Hatch
Deja Knight
Section IV Health Systems
289(72)
13 From Cultural to Structural Competency: The Evolving Roles of Health-Care Providers and Medical Education Training to Address Persistent Disparities
291(20)
Cirila Estela Vasquez Guzman
Andrew L. Sussman
14 Evolving from a Disease-Focused to a Health-Focused Health-Care System: From Pathogenesis to Salutogenesis
311(14)
David Rakel
15 The Limits of Resiliency: Rethinking Wellness in a Family Medicine Residency Program
325(18)
Mary Alice Scott
John Andazola
Russell L. Holman
16 Milagro: An Innovative Program for Pregnant Women with Substance Use Disorders
343(18)
Nicole Yonke
Sarah Gopman
Section V Collaboration, Policy, Messaging, and Data
361(70)
17 Aligning Research with Action for Health and Well-Being in the Columbia Gorge: The Community Health Advocacy and Research Alliance
363(24)
Kristen Dillon
Paul Lindberg
Melinda Davis
18 Shifting Narratives for Behavioral Health Justice: The #NMspeaksCrisis Campaign
387(22)
Jaelyn deMaria
Roberta Rael
19 A Place-Based Approach to Assessing Wellness and Well-Being: The New Mexico Community Data Collaborative
409(22)
Thomas N. Scharmen
Gale G. Hannigan
Index 431(6)
About the Contributors 437
Janet M. Page-Reeves is associate professor in the Department of Family and Community Medicine and the director of research for the Office for Community Health at the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center.