Religion and public health: conceptualization and collaboration from a public health perspective
Anish K. Arora, Johnathon Ehsani, Beth Resnick, Yovania Dechtiar, Andrew Hatala

TL;DR
This study explores how public health professionals view and engage with religious communities, highlighting the need for more meaningful collaboration to improve health outcomes.
Contribution
The paper introduces insights into how public health practitioners conceptualize religion and proposes strategies for deeper, more inclusive collaboration.
Findings
Public health professionals often engage religious communities in an instrumental manner rather than as true partners.
Meaningful collaboration requires principles like trust, transparency, and valuing community knowledge.
Integration of religion into public health education could foster more inclusive practices.
Abstract
Religion and public health, when understood in their broadest sense, are systems of knowledge and practice that seek to improve the wellbeing of people and populations. With over 75.8% of the global population identifying with some form of religious belief, understanding how the public health community conceptualizes religion and engages with it is essential for meaningful collaboration. The purpose of this study is to explore the conceptualizations of and relationships between religion and public health, focusing on public health practitioners’ experiences in engaging with religious communities. This qualitative study involved interviews with 15 North American public health practitioners across diverse religious and ethnic backgrounds, examining their perspectives on religion’s role in health interventions, with a particular focus on the COVID-19 pandemic. Using a framework analysis,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReligion, Spirituality, and Psychology · Religion, Society, and Development · Dietary Effects on Health
