糖心Vlog

Want to connect with your research? Try rapping it

Public health academic says studies must speak the same language as their subjects

Published on
April 18, 2018
Last updated
April 18, 2018
woman different mouth
Rhyming data: Being Human draws on the views of marginalised communities

Academics typically rely on a journal article to call for a shift in their discipline鈥檚 research agenda. But for Marisa de Andrade, it seemed much more fitting to use a hip hop song.

The verses of , the result of the Measuring Humanity project led by Dr de Andrade at the University of Edinburgh, argue that public health researchers will fail to genuinely capture the perspectives of the communities that they are studying if they rely on traditional approaches such as surveys and interviews.

Dr de Andrade, lecturer in health, science and society at Edinburgh, believes that academics should use media聽that connect with their subjects 鈥 such as hip hop.

The lyrics of Being Human, written and performed by Belle Jones and Lauren Gilmour, draw on the input of black and ethnic minority participants to highlight how attempts to improve health services misrepresent society鈥檚 most marginalised communities.

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鈥淚鈥檓 not used to putting emotions on a scale/To choose if I鈥檓 a six or eight requires more detail鈥, says one line, while another sums it up as follows: 鈥淭hese sentiments aren鈥檛 easy to categorise/Sometimes it鈥檚 easier to spin out white lies/There are things I just don鈥檛 want to share about myself/I don鈥檛 think I fit into the boxes on your shelf.鈥

In an accompanying article published in 鈥 which, albeit in a more traditional medium, manages to quote rapper Tupac Shakur 鈥 Dr de Andrade says that policymakers and academics need to 鈥渞eassess what counts as evidence鈥.

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鈥淐onventional public health research generally shuns data unless they are in standard scientific forms, even if unacceptable to a community that speaks another language or is unable or unwilling to express itself in traditionally academic ways,鈥 she warns.

Measuring Humanity, in contrast, has used techniques such as poetry, singing, theatre and writing workshops to generate insights into what health services would look like if disadvantaged communities in Edinburgh and Dundee had been put in charge of them.

鈥淭he arts and act of humans coming together in community provide missing pieces of evidence that must be understood to tackle complex health problems,鈥 says Dr de Andrade. 鈥淏y privileging the person鈥檚 voice, a richer understanding emerges of complex, deep-rooted reasons for ill health鈥here is a need for engagement and data collection through whatever creative or relational form is valid and appropriate for communities.鈥

However, Dr de Andrade highlights that projects drawing on such techniques rely on the goodwill of community leaders and charities and, crucially, sustained funding. Hence, there is a risk that, just as findings start to emerge, funding runs out and reports are shelved and proposed interventions are suspended.

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matthew.reisz@timeshighereducation.com

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Print headline:聽Try rapping for research impact

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