Welcome to the IKCEST

Journal of Communications In Healthcare | Vol., Issue. | 2020-09-15 | Pages

Journal of Communications In Healthcare

Contact tracers as knowledge-makers

Liebel, Anne Marie  
Abstract

Contact tracing is one of the primary tools in interrupting the transmission of infectious disease, including COVID-19. Contact tracing has been shown to be a set of varied roles and contextualized practices. It is essential that contact tracer training reflect this complexity, and prepare and support contact tracers to engage in this multilayered work. However, there are potential obstacles to preparing and supporting contact tracers beyond necessary knowledge and skills, including dominant discourses which position contact tracers as mere technicians responsible for delivering information. Contact tracing involves professional decision-making, negotiation and deliberation. Contact tracers have first-hand knowledge of these roles and practices. Those who do the work of contact tracing need to be able to learn from each other and to generate knowledge. Suggestions are given for how contact tracer training may invite and structure such learning, and recognize contact tracers as knowledge-makers.The knowledge generated by contact tracers can inform future health communication and public health workforce development efforts.

Original Text (This is the original text for your reference.)

Contact tracers as knowledge-makers

Contact tracing is one of the primary tools in interrupting the transmission of infectious disease, including COVID-19. Contact tracing has been shown to be a set of varied roles and contextualized practices. It is essential that contact tracer training reflect this complexity, and prepare and support contact tracers to engage in this multilayered work. However, there are potential obstacles to preparing and supporting contact tracers beyond necessary knowledge and skills, including dominant discourses which position contact tracers as mere technicians responsible for delivering information. Contact tracing involves professional decision-making, negotiation and deliberation. Contact tracers have first-hand knowledge of these roles and practices. Those who do the work of contact tracing need to be able to learn from each other and to generate knowledge. Suggestions are given for how contact tracer training may invite and structure such learning, and recognize contact tracers as knowledge-makers.The knowledge generated by contact tracers can inform future health communication and public health workforce development efforts.

+More

Cite this article
APA

APA

MLA

Chicago

Liebel, Anne Marie,.Contact tracers as knowledge-makers. (),.

Disclaimer: The translated content is provided by third-party translation service providers, and IKCEST shall not assume any responsibility for the accuracy and legality of the content.
Translate engine
Article's language
English
中文
Pусск
Français
Español
العربية
Português
Kikongo
Dutch
kiswahili
هَوُسَ
IsiZulu
Action
Recommended articles

Report

Select your report category*



Reason*



By pressing send, your feedback will be used to improve IKCEST. Your privacy will be protected.

Submit
Cancel