I am so excited for this year’s Social Medicine Consortium Third Annual Conference, Sharing Strategies for Health Equity. It is going to be held in Gallup and it is not too late to get tickets for next week’s’ events. You can find out more and register here.
Folks, Camara Jones will be there! Camara Jones! If you haven’t seen her talk on the Allegory on Race and Racism, it is simply amazing and an even more amazing resource for communicating complex issues around the effects of racism.
What is social medicine?
What IS social medicine, you may be asking…it is the “belief that inequity kills, and that together we can achieve health equity by constructing systems that demand justice, recognizing our global interconnectedness, and supporting the next generation of health professionals.”
To help you share in my excitement–here is a wonderful talk that Joia Mukherjee, the Medical Director at Partners In Health, gave about a year ago at a Social Medicine Symposium at the University of Minnesota.
Her impassioned talk is a great reminder to “reimagine” the social factors behind health and wellbeing and to examine the social inequality as a risk factor for disease.
Social Medicine Discussion Questions:
Do you have time in the upcoming week in your team meeting to watch her talk with your team? Here are a few discussion questions that might spark an interesting conversation with your team and to push the social-justice-envelope:
How would you define social medicine and how it impacts health and health care?
Joia talks about how she dislikes the term “social determinants of health”. What are your thoughts on the term and on her distaste for it?
How does your work “reimagine social medicine”?
What else could you do to ensure that we are considering the social issues that are behind our work?
Are there structural violence structures that are we actively fighting with our work? What structural violence should we consider more actively in our work?
Let’s stand together…
PS: If you are interested in learning more about how doctors can fight for social justice, read more here.