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Mobilising “vulnerability” in the public health response to pandemic influenza

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  • Stephenson, Niamh
  • Davis, Mark
  • Flowers, Paul
  • MacGregor, Casimir
  • Waller, Emily

Abstract

Analysis of public health's growing interest in “vulnerability” has largely focused on health policy, with little interrogation of how vulnerability is being actively appropriated, countered, ignored or reworked by the publics whose health such policy is designed to protect. Once the assemblage of public health is understood as comprised of different forms of expertise and actors, including publics, addressing this gap matters. We examine the use of vulnerability in the specific context of pandemic influenza preparedness. Pandemic preparedness raises some familiar dilemmas for public health governance: how to engage with publics without fuelling social divisions and disruption; and whether to invoke publics as passive recipients of public health advice or to recognise publics as collective agents responding to the threat of pandemic influenza. Thus, we ask how the mobilisation of vulnerability connects with these dilemmas. To examine vulnerability in pandemic preparedness, two forms of qualitative data are analysed: 1) interviews and focus groups with “vulnerable” and “healthy” people (conducted 2011–12) discussing seasonal and pandemic influenza and; 2) international, Australian national and state level pandemic plans (1999–2013). Vulnerability is variously used in plans as a way to identify groups at particular risk of infection because of pre-existing clinical conditions, and as a free-floating social category that could apply to a broad range of people potentially involved in the social disruption a pandemic might entail. Our interview and focus group data indicate that healthy people rework the free-floating extension of vulnerability, and that people designated vulnerable encounter an absence of any collective responsibility for the threat of pandemic influenza. Our analysis suggests that vulnerability's mobilisation in pandemic preparedness limits the connection between public health governance and its publics: here, the openness and unpredictability of people's collective agency is something to be tightly controlled by a government concerned with protecting people from themselves.

Suggested Citation

  • Stephenson, Niamh & Davis, Mark & Flowers, Paul & MacGregor, Casimir & Waller, Emily, 2014. "Mobilising “vulnerability” in the public health response to pandemic influenza," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 102(C), pages 10-17.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:socmed:v:102:y:2014:i:c:p:10-17
    DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.11.031
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Davis, Mark & Stephenson, Niamh & Flowers, Paul, 2011. "Compliant, complacent or panicked? Investigating the problematisation of the Australian general public in pandemic influenza control," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 72(6), pages 912-918, March.
    2. Kippax, Susan & Race, Kane, 2003. "Sustaining safe practice: twenty years on," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 57(1), pages 1-12, July.
    3. Kippax, S. & Stephenson, N. & Parker, R.G. & Aggleton, P., 2013. "Between individual agency and structure in HIV prevention: Understanding the middle ground of social practice," American Journal of Public Health, American Public Health Association, vol. 103(8), pages 1367-1375.
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    Cited by:

    1. Habran, Yves & Küpers, Wendelin & Weber, Jean-Christophe, 2024. "Reconceiving vulnerabilities in relations of care how to account for and deal with carers’ vulnerabilities," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 340(C).

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