Hospital fundraising campaign shouldn't use 'war as metaphor,' says U of O prof - Action News
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Ottawa

Hospital fundraising campaign shouldn't use 'war as metaphor,' says U of O prof

A University of Ottawa professor is speaking out against a recently-launched fundraising campaign by Toronto's Hospital for Sick Kids that uses "war as a metaphor" for the experience of living with a disease.

$2M ad campaign shows sick children kicking, punching adversaries, such as cancer and autism

The campaign, titled "VS," set to the pounding beat of the rap song Undeniable by Donnie Daydream, depicts patients of the hospital, past and present, kicking, punching and battling down adversaries like cancer, liver failure and cystic fibrosis. (The Hospital for Sick Children)

A University of Ottawa professor is speaking out against a flashy, hard-to-ignore fundraising campaign by Toronto's Hospital for Sick Kids that uses "war as a metaphor" for the experience of living with a disease.

Michael Orsini, a professor in the school of political studies, recently co-authored an editorial that calls out the hospital's new four-part "VS" ad campaign, which depicts patients and former patients literally fighting back as boxers, wrestlers and soldiers against the illnesses they're facing.

"When we talk about war and battle, there are winners and losers," Orsini told Ottawa Morning host Robyn Bresnahanon Thursday.

"I think [the campaign]leaves out the folks who are so-called 'brave soldiers' who cannot win the war, win the fight. And that is really kind of unfortunate."

Set to the pulsing beats of thesongUndeniableby rapperDonnie Daydream, "VS"depicts hospitalpatients kicking, punching and swinging baseball bats againstadversaries likecancer, kidneyfailure and cystic fibrosis.

The hospital was keenly awarethe $2-million ad campaign could court controversy, however.Earlier this month, hospital foundation CEO TedGarrardtold CBC News hehoped the ad would"jolt" viewers out of their complacency.

"The most important thing is you think twice about it," Garrard said. "What we are hoping is, even if people find it uncomfortable, they will say, 'OK, why are they doing this? What's the story they are trying to tell?'"

"We want to jolt people on the sidelines people who would not have thought of getting involved with Sick Kids before."

But the "very violent images" and the use of "war as a metaphor" for children'sexperience with disease, said Orisini,was what compelled himand University of Toronto professor Anne McGuire to write their opinion piece againstthe campaign.

Not representative of patients' experiences

The piece was publishedOct. 19 on Impact Ethics, a website managed by researchers at Dalhousie University in Halifax that describes itselfas a "forum for discussion of and commentary on bioethical issues."

"I have no right to tell someone that what they're fighting is not a battle, but I do think that framing this [with] violent imagery is quite another thing altogether," said Orsini, who also studies health policy and disability at the U of O.

"The point is to sort of begin from the perspective of folks who are living with these conditions, and that means there's a variety of human experience. That variety, for me, is not represented."

Orsini also saidhe had problems with the fact that the ad campaign also includes autism as one of the adversaries.

"Autism is not a disease in the way that we think about the diseases that are summoned in this campaign," he said. "For people who are autistic autistic children, autistic adults autism is not something they want fixed. It's not something they want to cure."

Sick isn`t weak. That`s the message from a striking new ad campaign from the Toronto sick kids hospital.