02245nas a2200229 4500000000100000008004100001260001200042653001700054653002400071653001200095653001000107100001400117700001500131700001300146700001100159245013400170856026000304300000700564490000700571520142300578022001402001 2020 d bMedknow10aInequalities10aInfectious Diseases10aPoverty10aPower1 aMabhala M1 aYohannes A1 aMassey A1 aReid J00aMind your language: Discursive practices produce unequal power and control over infectious disease: A critical discourse analysis uhttps://www.researchgate.net/profile/Mzwandile_Mabhala/publication/339962611_Mind_your_language_Discursive_practices_produce_unequal_power_and_control_over_infectious_disease_A_critical_discourse_analysis/links/5e78dc4f4585158bd500672b/Mind-your-language- a370 v113 aBackground: Power, socioeconomic inequalities, and poverty are recognized as some of the fundamental determinants of differences in vulnerability of societies to infectious disease threats. The economic south is carrying a higher burden than those in the economic north. This raises questions about whether social preventions and biomedical preventions for infectious disease are given equal consideration, and about social institutions and structures that frame the debate about infectious disease. This article examines how institutionalized ways of talking about infectious disease reinforces, creates, and sustains health inequalities.
Methods: Critical discourse analysis was considered to be epistemologically and ontologically consistent with the aims and context of this study.

Results: The study examined three types of infectious disease: • Emerging infectious diseases/pathogens • Neglected tropical diseases • Vector‑borne infections. Examination revealed that poverty is the most common determinant of all three. Conclusions: A sustainable reduction in infectious disease in the southern countries is most likely to be achieved through tackling socioeconomic determinants. There is a need for a change in the discourse on infectious disease, and adopt a discourse that promotes self‑determination, rather than one that reinforces the hero‑victim scenario and power inequalities. a2008-7802