Esther Kaner
Anthropology, UCL
UBEL Pathway: Anthropology
Supervisor: Professor Sahra Gibbon
Contact details: esther.kaner.20@ucl.ac.uk
About Me
Prior to commencing my PhD, I completed an undergraduate degree in Human Sciences at the University of Oxford, and a master’s degree in Biosocial Medical Anthropology at UCL. I am interested primarily in how structural and ecological conditions manifest in the body, and how understandings of ‘health’ are shaped by discursive formations of power. I am a supporter of interdisciplinary, collaborative and creative working, and seek to draw from a range of disciplines in my research, including social epidemiology, political ecology, critical medical anthropology and the creative arts.
Aside from my academic work, I am a member of Medact and have written on health justice for several non-academic publications, including It’s Freezing in LA!, NSUN, Tribune and Ceasefire magazines. I have also spent the past year working part-time for a Community and Voluntary Service, which has helped shape my interest in community-based approaches to health.
|
Twitter: @lazyatthemoment |
My Research
My project will investigate different articulations of health and care in the context of social prescribing. Under social prescribing sufferers of chronic illnesses are referred to local, non-clinical services by primary care workers. Embedded in its rollout is an acknowledgment of the social determinants of health. Its potential to challenge inequalities is, however, likely shaped by the intricacies of service users’ lived experiences. Using anthropological methods and theories, my proposed research seeks to explore understandings of ‘health’ articulated by those participating in and delivering social prescribing, and, therefore, whether social prescribing reduces or further entrenches health inequalities.
To address these questions, I will undertake an ethnography of social prescribing in the UK, facilitated by my supervisory connection to the National Academy of Social Prescribing. This will involve multi-sited participant observation with a small group of service users in their daily lives and interactions with the scheme, as well as semi-structured interviews with service deliverers and policymakers. By comparing perspectives across social prescribing, I will explore tensions between its intentions and its effects in practice. This research contributes to the emerging field of biosocial medical anthropology, which seeks to investigate how social experiences and exposures are embodied as health outcomes.
Impact of My Research
This research carries the potential to inform critical areas of public health policy to the benefit of research participants and more broadly. Most obviously it will contribute to the evidence base around social prescribing in the UK, on which ethnographic research is currently lacking, to ensure best practice and optimal care for participants. The research also holds implications for UK socioeconomic policy and the voluntary sector in shaping health outcomes and lived experiences of chronic illness. The project thus has the potential to transform understandings of public health by examining directly how health inequalities are experienced in everyday life. In the wake of austerity, the Covid-19 pandemic and an emerging cost-of-living crisis, such research is critical to the development of just social policy. By documenting the effects of political economic and sociocultural formations upon the body, biosocial medical anthropology elucidates contemporary patterns of suffering, and additionally proposes potentially ameliorative frameworks.
You must be logged in to post a comment.