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. 2025 Mar;46(1):59-73.
doi: 10.1007/s10912-024-09877-7. Epub 2024 Jul 23.

Shame-Sensitive Public Health

Affiliations

Shame-Sensitive Public Health

Fred Cooper et al. J Med Humanit. 2025 Mar.

Abstract

In this article, we argue that shaming interventions and messages during Covid-19 have drawn the relationship between public health and shame into a heightened state of contention, offering us a valuable opportunity to reconsider shame as a desired outcome of public health work, and to push back against the logics of individual responsibility and blame for illness and disease on which it sits. We begin by defining shame and demonstrating how it is conceptually and practically distinct from stigma. We then set out evidence on the consequences of shame for social and relational health outcomes and assess the past and present dimensions of shame in the context of the Covid-19 pandemic, primarily through a corpus of international news stories on the shaming of people perceived to have transgressed public health directions or advice. Following a brief note on shame (and policymaking) in a cultural context, we turn to the concept and practice of 'shame-sensitivity' in order to theorise a set of practical and adaptable principles that could be used to assist policymakers in short- and medium-term decision-making on urgent, tenacious, and emerging issues within public health. Finally, we consider the longer consequences of pandemic shame, making a wider case for the acknowledgement of the emotion as a key determinant of health.

Keywords: Covid-19; Public health; Shame; Stigma.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declarations. Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests.

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