Culturally responsive approaches to cultivate care and innovation among emerging public health leaders for ethical community engagement: perspectives informed through lived experience
Marina Suzanne Hernandez, Ruth Murcia

TL;DR
This paper argues for integrating diverse disciplines into public health education to better equip leaders with cultural awareness and collaborative skills.
Contribution
The paper introduces culturally responsive strategies to enhance leadership and ethical engagement in public health through transdisciplinary approaches.
Findings
Public health programs often neglect interdisciplinary training, leaving graduates unprepared for collaborative work.
Emerging leaders are pressured to conform to traditional practices, losing their cultural identities in the process.
Incorporating humanities and social sciences can improve community engagement and leadership effectiveness.
Abstract
Traditional methods of public health research, practice, and education continue to overlook the value of multidisciplinary approaches to research, practice, and training in addressing health problems. Students who graduate from public health programs gain insufficient exposure to other fields of study and lack the leadership skills to effectively navigate interprofessional teams. Generally, public health programs do not adequately prepare students to engage with scholars from other fields such as humanities, ethnic studies, gender studies, etc. whose dynamic perspectives have not traditionally been considered in public health frameworks. Students, thus, become professionals who are ill-equipped to apply transdisciplinary approaches that critically examine the complex landscape of social health determinants and evolving health crises. Moreover, emerging student leaders with intimate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCommunication in Education and Healthcare · Service-Learning and Community Engagement · Media Influence and Health
