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      Anthropology in public health emergencies: what is anthropology good for?

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          Abstract

          Recent outbreaks of Ebola virus disease (2013–2016) and Zika virus (2015–2016) bring renewed recognition of the need to understand social pathways of disease transmission and barriers to care. Social scientists, anthropologists in particular, have been recognised as important players in disease outbreak response because of their ability to assess social, economic and political factors in local contexts. However, in emergency public health response, as with any interdisciplinary setting, different professions may disagree over methods, ethics and the nature of evidence itself. A disease outbreak is no place to begin to negotiate disciplinary differences. Given increasing demand for anthropologists to work alongside epidemiologists, clinicians and public health professionals in health crises, this paper gives a basic introduction to anthropological methods and seeks to bridge the gap in disciplinary expectations within emergencies. It asks: ‘What can anthropologists do in a public health crisis and how do they do it?’ It argues for an interdisciplinary conception of emergency and the recognition that social, psychological and institutional factors influence all aspects of care.

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          Most cited references37

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          An Anthropology of Structural Violence

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            Culture and health.

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              Social inequalities and emerging infectious diseases.

              P S Farmer (1996)
              Although many who study emerging infections subscribe to social-production-of-disease theories, few have examined the contribution of social inequalities to disease emergence. Yet such inequalities have powerfully sculpted not only the distribution of infectious diseases, but also the course of disease in those affected. Outbreaks of Ebola, AIDS, and tuberculosis suggest that models of disease emergence need to be dynamic, systemic, and critical. Such models--which strive to incorporate change and complexity, and are global yet alive to local variation--are critical of facile claims of causality, particularly those that scant the pathogenic roles of social inequalities. Critical perspectives on emerging infections ask how large-scale social forces influence unequally positioned individuals in increasingly interconnected populations; a critical epistemology of emerging infectious diseases asks what features of disease emergence are obscured by dominant analytic frameworks. Research questions stemming from such a reexamination of disease emergence would demand close collaboration between basic scientists, clinicians, and the social scientists and epidemiologists who adopt such perspectives.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                BMJ Glob Health
                BMJ Glob Health
                bmjgh
                bmjgh
                BMJ Global Health
                BMJ Publishing Group (BMA House, Tavistock Square, London, WC1H 9JR )
                2059-7908
                2018
                25 March 2018
                : 3
                : 2
                : e000534
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Médecins Sans Frontières , London, UK
                [2 ] departmentMarie Bashir Institute for Infectious Diseases and Biosecurity, Charles Perkins Centre and School of Life and Environmental Sciences , The University of Sydney , Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
                [3 ] departmentStanford Medical School , Stanford University , Stanford, California, USA
                [4 ] Anthrologica , Oxford, UK
                Author notes
                [Correspondence to ] Dr Darryl Stellmach; darryl.stellmach@ 123456london.msf.org
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3845-6874
                Article
                bmjgh-2017-000534
                10.1136/bmjgh-2017-000534
                5873540
                29607097
                7312d64c-2554-4f93-82cf-fee10d7e853d
                © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.

                This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

                History
                : 23 August 2017
                : 31 January 2018
                : 05 February 2018
                Categories
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                public health,health systems,qualitative study,viral haemorrhagic fevers,other infection, disease, disorder, or injury

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