Reframing Photovoice: Building on the Method to Develop More Equitable and Responsive Research Practices

Qual Health Res. 2020 May;30(6):960-972. doi: 10.1177/1049732320905564. Epub 2020 Feb 21.

Abstract

An increasing focus on health equity across a number of health disciplines is generating more consistent prioritizations of trauma-informed approaches, cultural responsiveness, and community engagement. These foci have heightened interest in photovoice as a participatory research method-particularly in research among vulnerable populations or related to sensitive topics. Photovoice's ballooning popularity can be traced in part to the alignment of its aims and practices with broad health equity goals; at the same time, its singular status reveals a lack of similarly creative, adaptive methods for use in vulnerable or sensitive contexts. In addition, photovoice is not without its concerning limitations, and its increasing usage warrants not only caution, but responsive innovation. To that end, this article draws on the extensive photovoice literature, as well as on the author's own work at the intersections of public health and the arts, to offer an overview of four photovoice limitations and related concerns. It then highlights the method's untapped potential by identifying under-researched qualities in need of development-noting these as opportunities to learn from (and further adapt) the photovoice method. Finally, the article pulls limitations and benefits together to frame photovoice as a basis for the continued innovation, study, and development of more equitable approaches to health research and practice.

Keywords: United States; arts-based; community health; health equity; participatory; photovoice; public health; qualitative; research methods; trauma-informed.

MeSH terms

  • Community-Based Participatory Research*
  • Health Equity*
  • Humans
  • Photography
  • Public Health
  • Vulnerable Populations