Keeping It Political and Powerful: Defining the Structural Determinants of Health

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Abstract

Policy Points The structural determinants of health are 1) the written and unwritten rules that create, maintain, or eliminate durable and hierarchical patterns of advantage among socially constructed groups in the conditions that affect health, and 2) the manifestation of power relations in that people and groups with more power based on current social structures work—implicitly and explicitly—to maintain their advantage by reinforcing or modifying these rules. This theoretically grounded definition of structural determinants can support a shared analysis of the root causes of health inequities and an embrace of public health's role in shifting power relations and engaging politically, especially in its policy work. Shifting the balance of power relations between socially constructed groups differentiates interventions in the structural determinants of health from those in the social determinants of health.

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Heller, J. C., Givens, M. L., Johnson, S. P., & Kindig, D. A. (2024). Keeping It Political and Powerful: Defining the Structural Determinants of Health. Milbank Quarterly, 102(2), 351–366. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0009.12695

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