S
Seth M. Holmes
Researcher at University of California, Berkeley
Publications - 65
Citations - 3317
Seth M. Holmes is an academic researcher from University of California, Berkeley. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social determinants of health & Health care. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 56 publications receiving 2390 citations. Previous affiliations of Seth M. Holmes include University of California & University of Pennsylvania.
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"Oaxacans Like to Work Bent Over": The Naturalization of Social Suffering among Berry Farm Workers
TL;DR: The Skagit River as mentioned in this paper flows west from the mountains of the North Cascades National Park in northwestern Washington State to the Pacific Ocean's Puget Sound, pouring through some of the most spectacular vistas in North America.
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Structural Competency: Curriculum for Medical Students, Residents, and Interprofessional Teams on the Structural Factors That Produce Health Disparities
Joshua Neff,Seth M. Holmes,Kelly R. Knight,Shirley Strong,Ariana Thompson-Lastad,Cara McGuinness,Laura Duncan,Nimish Saxena,Michael Harvey,Alice Langford,Katiana L. Carey-Simms,Sara N. Minahan,Shannon Satterwhite,Caitlin Ruppel,Sonia Lee,lillian walkover,Jorge De Avila,Brett Lewis,Jenifer Matthews,Nicholas Nelson +19 more
TL;DR: A brief, interprofessional structural competency curriculum is reported on that fills a gap in health professional education by equipping learners to understand and respond to the role that social, economic, and political structural factors play in patient and community health.
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Structural vulnerability and hierarchies of ethnicity and citizenship on the farm.
TL;DR: The ethnographic data argue against the common presumption that social hierarchies are willed by powerful individuals by showing the structural production of these social inequalities and their concomitant health disparities.
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The clinical gaze in the practice of migrant health: Mexican migrants in the United States
TL;DR: This paper challenges the focus of mainstream cultural competency training by showing that it is not the culture of the patient, but rather the structure and culture of biomedicine that form the primary barriers to effective multicultural health care.
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COVID-19 reveals weak health systems by design: Why we must re-make global health in this historic moment.
Sriram Shamasunder,Seth M. Holmes,Tinashe Goronga,Tinashe Goronga,Hector Carrasco,Hector Carrasco,Elyse Katz,Raphael Frankfurter,Salmaan Keshavjee +8 more
TL;DR: The COVID-19 pandemic demonstrates the critical need to reimagine and repair the broken systems of global health and calls on governments, multilateral agencies, universities, and NGOs to engage in true collaboration and partnership in this historic moment.