Back to Search
Start Over
Short horizons and obesity futures: Disjunctures between public health interventions and everyday temporalities
- Source :
- Social Science & Medicine. 128:309-315
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2015.
-
Abstract
- This paper examines the spatio-temporal disjuncture between ‘the future’ in public health obesity initiatives and the embodied reality of eating. Drawing upon ethnographic fieldwork in a disadvantaged community in South Australia (August 2012–July 2014), we argue that the future oriented discourses of managing risk employed in obesity prevention programs have limited relevance to the immediacy of poverty, contingencies and survival that mark people's day to day lives. Extending Bourdieu's position that temporality is a central feature of practice, we develop the concept of short horizons to offer a theoretical framework to articulate the tensions between public health imperatives of healthy eating, and local ‘tastes of necessity’. Research undertaken at the time of Australia's largest obesity prevention program (OPAL) demonstrates that pre-emptive and risk-based approaches to health can fail to resonate when the future is not within easy reach. Considering the lack of evidence for success of obesity prevention programs, over-reliance on appeals to ‘the future’ may be a major challenge to the design, operationalisation and success of interventions. Attention to local rather than future horizons reveals a range of innovative strategies around everyday food and eating practices, and these capabilities need to be understood and supported in the delivery of obesity interventions. We argue, therefore, that public health initiatives should be located in the dynamics of a living present, tailored to the particular, localised spatio-temporal perspectives and material circumstances in which people live.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Economic growth
Health (social science)
Poverty
Public health
Psychological intervention
Temporality
Health Promotion
Disadvantaged
Temporalities
Socioeconomic Factors
History and Philosophy of Science
South Australia
Immediacy
Public Health Practice
medicine
Humans
Obesity
Sociology
Anthropology, Cultural
Disadvantage
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 02779536
- Volume :
- 128
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Social Science & Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....67979f3352ae55fc270bcfd010fb9cdf
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.01.026