The Norman Transcript

Local news

March 15, 2009

Addressing inequalities in health care requires structure-oriented perspective

Great disparities in health care exist within local communities and around the world, but change will require rethinking some health communication approaches, the keynote speaker at a graduate communication conference at the University of Oklahoma said Saturday.

Dr. Mohan Dutta from Purdue University spoke about "Communicating Health to Address Global Inequalities" at the Sooner Communication Conference, an annual event organized by OU communication graduate students. This year, the theme was health communication.

Dutta drew on his quantitative and objective research both in the U.S. and throughout the world to make the case for a culture-centered agenda for communicating health.

There are differences in health knowledge, health care availability and health services use within local communities, inside individual countries and around the world, he said.

Many professionals and academics have focused time and money to try to make these disparities more just, but Dutta said some of those attempts have been misguided.

"We are really doing a cosmetic job of addressing inequalities," Dutta said.

Oftentimes, disparities in health care are viewed as a cultural problem, he said. Efforts to reach the marginalized focus on educating them about better health practices, with the hope that the culture will be changed and thus the disparity will disappear, Dutta said. But this view fails to take into consideration that communities are often marginalized as a result of a problem within the system's structure, he said.

Dutta gave the example of a study he conducted within the homeless community in Indiana. People often assume homeless people don't use health care because they don't know about it.

But Dutta said in his study he found the reason the homeless community did not take advantage of the health care available to them was because of bad experiences the first time they tried to use it. They were treated poorly by health care practitioners and had to fill out confusing forms.

When one realizes that disparities are not only cultural but also structural, however, the path to the solution to those inequalities changes.

"Ultimately, success in the culture-centered approach lies in being able to change policy," Dutta said.

Outsiders who want to bring equality need to listen to the people within the community, he said. They will know what is the most pressing need, he said. Once those within the community recognize where they are being marginalized, it is important to let them take control of organizing for change, Dutta said.

He gave an example of sex workers in Calcutta, India, with whom he worked. The sex workers took the leadership in the campaign to prevent HIV/AIDS. Among the sex workers, condoms were used only about 3 percent of the time because the workers were so desperate for money they couldn't negotiate with those who solicited them. If they didn't agree to unprotected sex, customers would go somewhere else.

To solve this problem, the sex workers created a lending mechanism to eliminate the urgent financial need of the workers. Then they collectively decided not to negotiate with customers who did not want protection. As a result of the community's efforts, condom usage rose to 96 percent, Dutta said.

Dutta said this example has become the poster child for participatory campaigns, "the idea being to create participatory strategies for listening to cultural voices."

The culture-centered view of global inequalities brings hope for change in policy as communities take action for things they have not had a voice in before, Dutta said. The hope comes, he said, "when you start looking at the ways in which we can work with people to address the structures of inequalities that they face."

The theme of Dutta's lecture reflected the theme of the two-day conference at OU. The graduate communication conference has grown since it was started 20 years ago as a more informal round table discussion, said Josh Averbeck, communication graduate student and event organizer.

"It has grown quite a bit, actually," he said.

In addition to a yearly keynote address, the conference is filled with panel discussions about students' research.

The purpose "is to sort of get people's feet wet in presenting their work," Averbeck said. About 65 graduate students participated this year from around the country.

Julianna Parker Jones 366-3541 jparker@normantranscript.com

Text Only
Local news
  • Woman in critical condition

    A hospital official said a Norman woman remains in critical condition after emergency responders reportedly extricated her from her vehicle....

    February 3, 2012

  • western2.jpg Western Avenue to close for expansion to four-lane highway

    On Monday, residents in northwest Norman will be a little closer to having a four-lane highway with paved shoulders as construction begins on 60th Avenue Northwest, also known as Western Avenue. When completed, the rural four-lane will ...

    February 3, 2012 1 Photo

  • School districts ready to go mobile

    In October, Norman Public Schools introduced an innovative communications tool with School Connect, a mobile app for Android and Apple phones, which enabled users to access virtually any school-related information with a tap on their touch ...

    February 3, 2012

  • Eye for beauty

    Beauty may be hard to measure, but it carries a price tag. For Norman City Council members, developers and the University North Park Architectural Review Board, balancing aesthetics with the cost of doing business has become an ongoing ...

    February 3, 2012

  • Norman Youth Council accepting applications

    The deadline to apply for Norman Youth Council is March 30. Interested high school students are encouraged to apply. Youth council is comprised of sophomore, junior and senior high school students who reside within Norman....

    February 3, 2012

  • Dispatcher reports need for extraction after wreck

    A Wednesday night car crash in northwest Norman placed one driver in the hospital....

    February 2, 2012

  • Arkansas Signing Day Football Tiger followed his gut on making college decision

    In the end, Donovan Roberts went with his gut. It was his gut that the Norman High senior relied on when he originally committed to Arkansas, and it’s what led him to sign with the Razorbacks on Wednesday, despite a late push from the ...

    February 2, 2012 4 Photos 1 Video

  • Man is still in critical condition

    A 61-year-old Patriot Guard Rider from Norman remains in critical condition after being involved in a two-vehicle crash Friday morning. His wife, Cindy Ayers, is maintaining her bedside vigil....

    February 2, 2012

  • Lexington manager remains on leave

    Lexington City Manager Jason Orr remains on administrative leave with pay, though the city will have to take action in less than a week. Jason Orr’s first court appearance is set for Feb. 15....

    February 2, 2012

  • Cushing residents closely watching pipeline’s fate

    CUSHING — While the Keystone XL pipeline has been grabbing national headlines, Cushing residents and businesses have watched the fate of the line with personal interest....

    February 2, 2012

The Business Marquee
Facebook