Black Lives Matter Principles as an Africentric Approach to Improving Black American Health
Although public health has made substantial advances in closing the health disparity gap, Black Americans still experience inequalities and inequities. Several theoretical frameworks have been used to develop public health interventions for Black American health; yet the existing paradigms do not fully account for the ontology, epistemology, or axiology of Black American populations. The Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement provides a basis for understanding the constructs that may contribute to Black American health. By drawing from the 13 BLM principles, this paper presents an alternative approach for developing, implementing, and evaluating public health interventions for Black populations in the USA. Furthermore, the approach may inform future public health research and policies to reduce health disparities within and across Black populations in the USA.
Anderson-Carpenter, K.D. Black Lives Matter Principles as an Africentric Approach to Improving Black American Health. J. Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities 8, 870–878 (2021). Link: https://doi.org/10.1007/s40615-020-00845-0