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1.
Health Promot Int ; 38(6)2023 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38041807

ABSTRACT

Reducing disease prevalence rather than promoting health has long been the objective of significant population health initiatives, such as the social determinants of health (SDH) framework. However, empirical evidence suggests that people with diagnosed diseases often answer the self-reported health (SRH) question positively. In pursuit of a better proxy to understand, measure and improve health, this scoping review of reviews examines the potential of SRH to be used as an outcome of interest in population health policies. Following PRISMA-ScR guidelines, it synthesizes findings from 77 review papers (published until 11 May 2022) and reports a robust association between SDH and SRH. It also investigates inconsistencies within and between reviews to reveal how variation in population health can be explained by studying the impact of contextual factors, such as cultural, social, economic and political elements, on structural determinants such as socioeconomic situation, gender and ethnicity. These insights provide informed hypotheses for deeper explorations of the role of SDH in improving SRH. The review detects several gaps in the literature. Notably, more evidence syntheses are required, in general, on the pathway from contextual elements to population SRH and, in particular, on the social determinants of adolescents' SRH. This study reports a disease-oriented mindset in collecting, analysing and reporting SRH across the included reviews. Future studies should utilize the capability of SRH in interconnecting social, psychological and biological dimensions of health to actualize its full potential as a central public health measure.


Subject(s)
Health Policy , Social Determinants of Health , Adolescent , Humans , Ethnicity , Self Report , Surveys and Questionnaires , Review Literature as Topic
2.
Cities ; 134: 104163, 2023 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36593904

ABSTRACT

Most government emergency/pandemic response plans feature top-down decision making and communication strategies and a focus on 'hard' (physical) infrastructure. There is nothing about the importance of the ideas and communications originating from communities, the social infrastructure that supports their impact locally and their contribution to the central administration. In this study, we found that the 'soft' (social) infrastructure within communities and between communities and formal institutions is key to an inclusive and more equitable response to large-scale crises like the COVID-19 pandemic. Grassroots leaders in six Toronto neighbourhoods were interviewed between the first and second waves of the COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto about what helped or hindered community action. Three themes emerged: (1) Grassroots leaders and community organizations were able to act as key connection points in a two-way flow of information and resources with residents and service providers; (2) Grassroots leaders and groups were challenged to engage in this work in a sustained capacity without adequate resourcing; and (3) there was a disconnect between community-centred grassroots approaches and the City's emergency response. We conclude that there needs to be pre-disaster investment in community level planning and preparation that fosters two-way connections between all municipal emergency/disaster and pandemic preparedness plans and community-centred organizations and grassroots leaders working in marginalized communities.

3.
Allergy ; 77(12): 3498-3512, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35748742

ABSTRACT

Planetary health provides a perspective of ecological interdependence that connects the health and vitality of individuals, communities, and Earth's natural systems. It includes the social, political, and economic ecosystems that influence both individuals and whole societies. In an era of interconnected grand challenges threatening health of all systems at all scales, planetary health provides a framework for cross-sectoral collaboration and unified systems approaches to solutions. The field of allergy is at the forefront of these efforts. Allergic conditions are a sentinel measure of environmental impact on human health in early life-illuminating how ecological changes affect immune development and predispose to a wider range of inflammatory noncommunicable diseases (NCDs). This shows how adverse macroscale ecology in the Anthropocene penetrates to the molecular level of personal and microscale ecology, including the microbial systems at the foundations of all ecosystems. It provides the basis for more integrated efforts to address widespread environmental degradation and adverse effects of maladaptive urbanization, food systems, lifestyle behaviors, and socioeconomic disadvantage. Nature-based solutions and efforts to improve nature-relatedness are crucial for restoring symbiosis, balance, and mutualism in every sense, recognizing that both personal lifestyle choices and collective structural actions are needed in tandem. Ultimately, meaningful ecological approaches will depend on placing greater emphasis on psychological and cultural dimensions such as mindfulness, values, and moral wisdom to ensure a sustainable and resilient future.


Subject(s)
Ecosystem , Environment , Humans
4.
Health Promot Pract ; 22(2): 170-173, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32174186

ABSTRACT

Retail food environments are an important setting for promoting healthier diets and reducing the global burden of diet-related disease. The purpose of this 2-year community-university partnership was to develop a health promotion intervention for stores in a rural and remote region of British Columbia, Canada. This article reports on the qualitative interviews that were conducted with retail operators as part of an intervention planning process. Seven in-depth, semistructured interviews were conducted with store owners and managers of small- and medium-sized stores in a rural and remote region. Interviews were analyzed using thematic analysis to identify business operations and practices relevant to intervention planning and implementation. Relevant considerations for health promotion planners included the unique business models of rural stores; the prominence of regional travel and "outshopping" in rural and remote regions; challenges balancing between choice, value, and profitability; relationships with suppliers; and using local products to attract and retain customers. Involving retailers in settings-based approaches to improve population nutrition may help to mobilize existing practices and ensure that interventions are responsive to local context.


Subject(s)
Food Supply , Food , British Columbia , Commerce , Diet, Healthy , Health Promotion , Humans , Rural Population
5.
Healthc Q ; 22(4): 55-58, 2020 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32073392

ABSTRACT

A key goal of programs in health management, policy and research is to transform students into effective leaders. Academic experience can impart knowledge about the skills or competencies required but may not be sufficient to transform students into leaders of health system change.


Subject(s)
Education, Graduate/methods , Health Occupations/education , Leadership , Female , Humans , Male
6.
BMC Public Health ; 14: 1234, 2014 Nov 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25432209

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Food banks have emerged in response to growing food insecurity among low-income groups in many affluent nations, but their ability to manage this problem is questionable. In Canada, in the absence of public programs and policy interventions, food banks are the only source of immediate assistance for households struggling to meet food needs, but there are many indications that this response is insufficient. The purpose of this study was to examine the factors that facilitate and limit food bank operations in five Canadian cities and appraise the potential of these initiatives to meet food needs. METHODS: An inventory of charitable food provisioning in Halifax, Quebec City, Toronto, Edmonton, and Victoria, Canada was conducted in 2010. Of the 517 agencies that participated in a telephone survey of their operations, 340 were running grocery programs. Multivariate regression analyses were conducted to determine the association between program characteristics, volume of service, and indicators of strain in food banks' abilities to consistently achieve the standards of assistance they had established. RESULTS: Extensive, well-established food bank activities were charted in each city, with the numbers of people assisted ranging from 7,111 in Halifax to 90,141 in Toronto per month. Seventy-two percent of agencies indicated that clients needed more food than they provided. The number of people served by any one agency in the course of a month was positively associated with the proportion of food distributed that came from donations (beta 0.0143, SE 0.0024, p 0.0041) and the number of volunteers working in the agency (beta 0.0630, SE 0.0159, p 0.0167). Food banks only achieved equilibrium between supply and demand when they contained demand through restrictions on client access. When access to assistance was less restricted, the odds of food banks running out of food and invoking measures to ration remaining supplies and restrict access rose significantly. CONCLUSIONS: Despite their extensive history, food banks in Canada remain dependent on donations and volunteers, with available resources quickly exhausted in the face of agencies' efforts to more fully meet clients' needs. Food banks have limited capacity to respond to the needs of those who seek assistance.


Subject(s)
Food Assistance , Food Services , Food Supply , Poverty , Canada , Cities , Data Collection , Family Characteristics , Female , Food , Food Assistance/statistics & numerical data , Food Services/statistics & numerical data , Food Supply/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Multivariate Analysis , Socioeconomic Factors , Volunteers
7.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38397611

ABSTRACT

There is mounting concern over the potential harms associated with ultra-processed foods, including poor mental health and antisocial behavior. Cutting-edge research provides an enhanced understanding of biophysiological mechanisms, including microbiome pathways, and invites a historical reexamination of earlier work that investigated the relationship between nutrition and criminal behavior. Here, in this perspective article, we explore how this emergent research casts new light and greater significance on previous key observations. Despite expanding interest in the field dubbed 'nutritional psychiatry', there has been relatively little attention paid to its relevancy within criminology and the criminal justice system. Since public health practitioners, allied mental health professionals, and policymakers play key roles throughout criminal justice systems, a holistic perspective on both historical and emergent research is critical. While there are many questions to be resolved, the available evidence suggests that nutrition might be an underappreciated factor in prevention and treatment along the criminal justice spectrum. The intersection of nutrition and biopsychosocial health requires transdisciplinary discussions of power structures, industry influence, and marketing issues associated with widespread food and social inequalities. Some of these discussions are already occurring under the banner of 'food crime'. Given the vast societal implications, it is our contention that the subject of nutrition in the multidisciplinary field of criminology-referred to here as nutritional criminology-deserves increased scrutiny. Through combining historical findings and cutting-edge research, we aim to increase awareness of this topic among the broad readership of the journal, with the hopes of generating new hypotheses and collaborations.


Subject(s)
Criminology , Food, Processed , Crime/psychology , Criminal Law
8.
Rev Panam Salud Publica ; 34(6): 473-80, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24569978

ABSTRACT

Health promotion and social determinants of health approaches, when integrated, can better contribute to understanding and addressing health inequities. Yet, they have typically been pursued as two solitudes. This paper presents the key elements, principles, actions, and potential synergies of these complementary frameworks for addressing health equity. The value-added of integrating these two approaches is illustrated by three examples drawn from the authors' experiences in the Americas: at the community level, through a community-based coalition for reducing chronic disease disparities among minorities in an urban center in the United States; at the national level, through healthy-settings interventions in Canada; and at the Regional level, through health cooperation based on social justice values in Latin America. Challenges to integrating health promotion and social determinants of health approaches in the Americas are also discussed.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care , Health Promotion/organization & administration , Health Status Disparities , Healthcare Disparities , Social Determinants of Health , Americas , Community Participation , Global Health , Goals , Health Planning Guidelines , Health Services Accessibility , Humans , Models, Theoretical , Public Health Administration , Public Policy , Systems Integration , Urban Health , Vulnerable Populations
9.
Nurs Inq ; 20(4): 317-28, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23033851

ABSTRACT

Recognizing the importance of health-promoting relationships in engaging people who are experiencing homelessness in care, most research on health clinics for homeless persons has involved some recognition of client-provider relationships. However, what has been lacking is the inclusion of a critical analysis of the policy context in which relationships are enacted. In this paper, we question how client-provider relationships are enacted within the culture of community care with people who are experiencing homelessness and how clinic-level and broader social and health policies shape relationships in this context. We explore these questions within a critical theoretical perspective utilizing a critical ethnographic methodology. Data were collected using multiple methods of document review, participant observation, in-depth interviews and focus groups. The participants include both clients at a community health clinic, and all clinic service providers. We explore how clients and providers characterized each other as 'good' or 'bad'. For providers, this served as a means by which they policed behaviours and enforced social norms. The means by which both providers' and clients' negotiated relationships are explored, but this is couched within both local and system-level policies. This study highlights the importance of healthcare providers and clients being involved in broader policy and systemic change.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Community Health Nursing , Community Health Services/organization & administration , Health Promotion/organization & administration , Ill-Housed Persons , Nurse-Patient Relations , Anthropology, Cultural , Data Collection/methods , Female , Humans , Male
10.
J Community Health Nurs ; 30(1): 28-41, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23384065

ABSTRACT

Homelessness is an experience of being displaced. Once removed from their personal places, homeless people are barred access to healthy places in which to be. Health clinics for people who are experiencing homelessness offer an opportunity to create health-promoting places. In this study, we explore how place is experienced within a community health clinic for people who are experiencing homelessness. A critical ethnographic methodology was used. Results illustrate how clients and providers contested the space of the clinic. Discourses of safety, health promotion, and privacy were enacted, altered, and resisted in a constant practice of culture-making. Physical components of the space became conceptual components of how place and power in place were understood by clients and providers. Results point to the importance of conceptualizing service users as the key stakeholders in their care, considering how places may be more or less health promoting, and rethinking how safety is conceptualized.


Subject(s)
Community Health Services/methods , Health Promotion/methods , Ill-Housed Persons , Community Health Services/organization & administration , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Privacy , Safety
11.
Lancet Planet Health ; 7(1): e86-e96, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36608955

ABSTRACT

This paper presents insights from the work of the Canadian Community of Practice in Ecosystem Approaches to Health (CoPEH-Canada) and 15 years (2008-2022) of land-based, transdisciplinary, learner-centred, transformative learning and training. We have oriented our learning approaches to Head, Hands, and Heart, which symbolise cognitive, psychomotor, and affective learning, respectively. Psychomotor and affective learning are necessary to grapple with and enact far-reaching structural changes (eg, decolonisation) needed to rekindle healthier, reciprocal relationships with nature and each other. We acknowledge that these approaches have been long understood by Indigenous colleagues and communities. We have developed a suite of teaching techniques and resources through an iterative and evolving pedagogy based on participatory approaches and operating reciprocal, research-pedagogical cycles; integrated different approaches and ways of knowing into our pedagogy; and built a networked Community of Practice for continued learning. Planetary health has become a dominant framing for health-ecosystem interactions. This Viewpoint underscores the depth of existing scholarship, collaboration, and pedagogical expertise in ecohealth teaching and learning that can inform planetary health education approaches.


Subject(s)
Ecosystem , Learning , Canada , Health Status , Health Education
12.
Sociol Health Illn ; 34(7): 978-93, 2012 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22384931

ABSTRACT

We discuss how the tobacco control discourse on youth smoking in Canada appears to be producing and constituting socially marginalised smokers. We analyse material from a study on social inequalities in Canadian youth smoking. Individual interviews were conducted in 2007 and 2008 with tobacco control practitioners specialising in youth smoking prevention in British Columbia and Quebec. We found that the discourse on youth smoking is creating a set of divisive practices, separating youths who have a capacity for self-control from those who do not, youths who are able to make responsible decisions from those who are not - with these distinctions often framed as a function of social class. Youths who smoke were not described simply as persons who smoke cigarettes but as individuals who, through their economic and social marginalisation, are biologically fated and behaviourally inclined to be smokers. This 'smokers' risk' discourse obscures the social structural conditions under which people smoke and reproduces the biological and behavioural reductionism of biomedicine. The collision of risk and class in the discourse on poor youth who smoke may not only be doubly burdening but may intensify social inequalities in youth smoking by forming subcultures of resistance and risk-taking.


Subject(s)
Adolescent Behavior , Smoking/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Marginalization , Tobacco Use Cessation/methods , Administrative Personnel/psychology , Administrative Personnel/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Canada/epidemiology , Female , Government Regulation , Health Promotion/methods , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Program Evaluation , Qualitative Research , Risk Factors , Risk Reduction Behavior , Risk-Taking , Smoking/epidemiology , Smoking/psychology , Social Class
13.
Prog Community Health Partnersh ; 16(2S): 91-97, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35912662

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Realist reviews have shown the effectiveness of participatory action research but the realist approach has not been used in combination with a participatory approach in qualitative data analysis. OBJECTIVES: To study the links between preexisting conditions in neighborhoods and the kind of actions taken at the community level during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic in Toronto, a community-university research partnership used a critical realist approach to analyze qualitative interviews with grassroots leaders. This article describes the procedures developed to enable participation of the full community- academic team in the analysis. METHODS: One analyst coded paragraphs in all 46 interviews for preexisting conditions (contexts), actions taken (intervention components), the often implicit factors that underpinned the actions (mechanisms), and observed results (outcomes) as stated by the interviewees. Each interview was summarized in terms of the contexts (C), actions (I), mechanisms (M) and outcomes (O) identified and one to seven midrange CIMO hypotheses were developed for each interview. A second level of analysis involved sense-making workshops with the community partner and a cross-section of interviewees using the CIMO statements. CONCLUSIONS: This article describes the realist approach to analysis and the changes that were made to enable a mixed team of community leaders and academics to generate overall statements of impact. This is a novel approach to qualitative data analysis, with a range of implications for the use of this technique in participatory research.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Community-Based Participatory Research , Health Services Research , Humans , Research Design , Universities
14.
Glob Health Promot ; 29(1): 101-104, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34510983

ABSTRACT

In this commentary, we describe initial learnings from a community-based research project that explored how the relational space between residents and formal institutions in six marginalised communities in Toronto, Ontario, Canada impacted grassroots responses to the health and psycho-social stresses that were created and amplified by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Our research found that grassroots community leaders stepped up to fill the gaps left by Toronto's formal public health and emergency management systems and were essential for mitigating the psycho-social and socioeconomic impacts of the pandemic that exacerbated pre-existing inequities and systemic failures. We suggest that building community resilience in marginalised communities in Toronto can embody health promotion in action where community members, organisational, institutional and government players create the social infrastructure necessary to build on local assets and work together to promote health by strengthening community action, advocating for healthy public policy and creating supportive environments.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , COVID-19/epidemiology , Community Participation , Health Promotion , Humans , Ontario/epidemiology , Public Health
15.
Health Promot Int ; 26 Suppl 2: ii202-15, 2011 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22080075

ABSTRACT

In this paper, we reflect on and explore what remains to be done to make the concept of supportive environments--one of the Ottawa Charter's five core action areas--a reality in the context of growing uncertainty about the future and accelerated pace of change. We pay particular attention to the physical environment, while underscoring the inextricable links between physical and social environments, and particularly the need to link social and environmental justice. The paper begins with a brief orientation to three emerging threats to health equity, namely ecological degradation, climate change, and peak oil, and their connection to economic instability, food security, energy security and other key determinants of health. We then present three contrasting perspectives on the nature of social change and how change is catalyzed, arguing for an examination of the conditions under which cultural change on the scale required to realize the vision of 'supportive environments for all' might be catalyzed, and the contribution that health promotion as a field could play in this process. Drawing on sociological theory, and specifically practice theory and the work of Pierre Bourdieu, we advocate rethinking education for social change by attending more adequately to the social conditions of transformative learning and cultural change. We conclude with an explication of three key implications for health promotion practice: a more explicit alignment with those seeking to curtail environmental destruction and promote environmental justice, strengthening engagement with local or settings-focused 'communities of practice' (such as the Transition Town movement), and finding new ways to creatively 'engage emergence', a significant departure from the current dominant focus on 'risk management'.


Subject(s)
Environment , Health Promotion/organization & administration , Health Status Disparities , Public Health , Social Environment , Climate Change , Ecosystem , Fossil Fuels , Health Behavior , Health Education/organization & administration , Humans , Life Style , Social Change , Social Justice
16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34639478

ABSTRACT

Urban resilience research is recognizing the need to complement a mainstream preoccupation with "hard" infrastructure (electrical grid, storm sewers, etc.) with attention to the "soft" (social) infrastructure issues that include the increased visibility of and role for civil society, moving from (top-down, paternalistic) government to (participatory) governance. Analyses of past shock events invariably point to the need for more concerted efforts in building effective governance and networked relations between civil society groupings and formal institutions before, during, and after crisis. However, the literature contains little advice on how to go about this. In this paper, we advance a Connected Community Approach (CCA) to building community resilience with a specific focus on the relationship between community and formal institutions. In the literature review that informs this work, we assess the current, limited models for connecting communities to formal institutions, as well as the emerging role of community-based organizations in this work, and we offer our own assessment of some of the key tensions, lacunae, and trends in the community resilience field. Principally, we explore the potential of the CCA model, as spearheaded by the East Scarborough Storefront and the Centre for Connected Communities in Toronto, Canada, as a promising approach for building the relational space between civil society and the state that is so often called for in the literature. The paper concludes with future directions for research and practice.


Subject(s)
Government , Canada
17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34682400

ABSTRACT

The "Earthrise" photograph, taken on the 1968 Apollo 8 mission, became one of the most significant images of the 20th Century. It triggered a profound shift in environmental awareness and the potential for human unity-inspiring the first Earth Day in 1970. Taking inspiration from these events 50 years later, we initiated Project Earthrise at our 2020 annual conference of inVIVO Planetary Health. This builds on the emergent concept of planetary health, which provides a shared narrative to integrate rich and diverse approaches from all aspects of society towards shared solutions to global challenges. The acute catastrophe of the COVID-19 pandemic has drawn greater attention to many other interconnected global health, environmental, social, spiritual, and economic problems that have been underappreciated or neglected for decades. This is accelerating opportunities for greater collaborative action, as many groups now focus on the necessity of a "Great Transition". While ambitious integrative efforts have never been more important, it is imperative to apply these with mutualistic value systems as a compass, as we seek to make wiser choices. Project Earthrise is our contribution to this important process. This underscores the imperative for creative ecological solutions to challenges in all systems, on all scales with advancing global urbanization in the digital age-for personal, environmental, economic and societal health alike. At the same time, our agenda seeks to equally consider our social and spiritual ecology as it does natural ecology. Revisiting the inspiration of "Earthrise", we welcome diverse perspectives from across all dimensions of the arts and the sciences, to explore novel solutions and new normative values. Building on academic rigor, we seek to place greater value on imagination, kindness and mutualism as we address our greatest challenges, for the health of people, places and planet.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Planets , Earth, Planet , Humans , Pandemics , SARS-CoV-2
18.
Tob Control ; 19(3): 206-12, 2010 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20501493

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The use of visual methodologies has gained increased prominence among health researchers working with socially marginalised populations, including those studying tobacco and other types of substance use. OBJECTIVES: This article draws from two separate studies combining qualitative and photographic methods to illustrate the unique insights that visual research with smokers can generate for tobacco control. METHODS: A purposeful selection of photographs and captions produced by research participants in a study with (1) 20 new fathers that smoke and, (2) a study with 21 adolescent girls that smoke are analysed and discussed in detail. RESULTS: Images produced by smokers illustrate the roles of gender and social context in shaping smoking status, as well as the private struggles with tobacco use experienced by smokers in their day-to-day lives and relationships. CONCLUSIONS: Photographic methods have the potential to generate information that may assist in developing tobacco control messaging and programming that speaks to smokers' perceptions of their tobacco use.


Subject(s)
Adolescent Behavior , Gender Identity , Photography , Self Concept , Smoking/psychology , Social Environment , Adolescent , Adult , Fathers , Female , Humans , Male , Young Adult
19.
Health Promot Int ; 25(4): 453-63, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20615911

ABSTRACT

Spatial disparities in environmental quality and practices are contributing to rising health inequalities worldwide. To date, the field of health promotion has not contributed as significantly as it might to a systematic analysis of the physical environment as a determinant of health nor to a critique of inequitable environmental governance practices responsible for social injustice-particularly in the Canadian context. In this paper, we explore ways in which health promotion and environmental justice perspectives can be combined into an integrated movement for environmental health justice in health promotion. Drawing on Canadian experiences, we describe the historical contributions and limitations of each perspective in research, policy and particularly professional practice. We then demonstrate how recent environmental justice research in Canada is moving toward a deeper and multi-level analysis of environmental health inequalities, a development that we believe can inform a comprehensive research, policy and advocacy agenda in health promotion toward environmental health justice as a fundamental determinant of health. Lastly, we propose four key considerations for health promotion professionals to consider in advancing this movement.


Subject(s)
Environmental Health/organization & administration , Health Policy , Health Promotion/methods , Health Promotion/organization & administration , Social Justice , Canada , Community Participation , Community-Based Participatory Research , Community-Institutional Relations , Consumer Advocacy , Humans
20.
Can J Public Health ; 111(6): 890-896, 2020 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33104971

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The Lighthouse Project (2017-2018) explored the role that faith-based organizations (FBOs) might play as resilience hubs for climate-related stresses and extreme weather emergencies in disadvantaged urban environments of three cities. This paper discusses the role that public health played in these initiatives and makes an appeal for more participatory, community-engaged public health in light of the persistent gaps in its approach to equitable climate change preparedness. METHODS: Pilots were initiated in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area (GTHA): Brampton's Emergency Managers offered pre-selected FBO volunteers specialized training to be part of the city's emergency response in establishing FBO sites as emergency muster stations. An environmental organization in Hamilton explored how its existing networks could rally around a local social resilience challenge, and a community organizer in Toronto undertook network building to support mostly newcomer populations in one inner-city neighbourhood. All pilots used a mix of cold calling, workshops, municipal presentations, and participation in local programming and public events. Two convened local working groups. RESULTS: By the end of the pilot, Brampton's Emergency Management Office had made one contractual relationship with an FBO and its volunteers. In Hamilton, a multi-stakeholder network emerged to support the climate preparedness of agencies serving local vulnerable populations. In Toronto, a residents' working group was established to address neighbour well-being and emergency response in one apartment tower. Work in all three communities is ongoing. CONCLUSION: Multi-stakeholder support for community organizations and local volunteers can enable partnerships in neighbourhood-level climate resilience-before, during and after extreme weather events. Public Health, while not typically top-of-mind as a key ally in this work, is well positioned to make a contribution. Consistent with place-based approaches, an emergent community development design enabled community animators to catalyze collaborations to suit the on-the-ground realities of each site.


RéSUMé: OBJECTIF: Le projet Lighthouse (2017-2018) a exploré le rôle de « carrefours de résilience ¼ que peuvent jouer les organisations confessionnelles (OC) face aux perturbations climatiques et aux situations d'urgence météorologique extrême dans les milieux urbains défavorisés de trois villes. Notre article porte sur le rôle que la santé publique a joué dans le cadre de ces initiatives et exhorte la santé publique à être plus participative et plus engagée localement, vu les lacunes qui persistent dans sa démarche de préparation équitable aux changements climatiques. MéTHODE: Des projets pilotes ont été amorcés dans la région du Grand Toronto et de Hamilton (RGTH) : les gestionnaires des mesures d'urgence de Brampton ont offert une formation spécialisée à des bénévoles d'organisations confessionnelles présélectionnées pour qu'ils fassent partie des interventions d'urgence de la ville en faisant de leurs OC des postes de rassemblement d'urgence. Un organisme de Hamilton voué à la protection de l'environnement a exploré les moyens pour ses réseaux existants de se rassembler pour résoudre des problèmes locaux de résilience sociale, et un organisateur de quartier de Toronto a constitué un réseau pour aider principalement les populations de nouveaux arrivants d'un quartier déshérité du centre-ville. Tous les projets pilotes ont procédé selon un mélange de démarchage téléphonique, d'ateliers, de présentations aux élus municipaux et de participation aux animations publiques et aux programmes locaux. Deux ont constitué des groupes de travail locaux. RéSULTATS: À la fin du projet pilote, le bureau de la gestion des situations d'urgence de Brampton avait établi une relation contractuelle avec une OC et ses bénévoles. À Hamilton, un réseau multilatéral est né pour aider les organismes locaux de services aux populations vulnérables à se préparer aux changements climatiques. À Toronto, on a établi un groupe de travail composé de résidents d'une tour d'habitation pour s'occuper du bien-être entre voisins et des interventions d'urgence. Le travail se poursuit dans les trois villes. CONCLUSION: L'appui d'un large éventail d'acteurs aux organismes associatifs et aux bénévoles locaux peut rendre possibles des partenariats pour la résilience climatique au niveau des quartiers­avant, pendant et après des événements météorologiques extrêmes. La santé publique, bien qu'elle ne vienne pas immédiatement à l'esprit comme étant un allié essentiel dans ce genre de travail, est bien placée pour apporter une contribution. Conformément aux approches fondées sur le lieu, un plan de développement de proximité émergent a permis à des animateurs socioculturels de chaque ville de faire naître des collaborations adaptées à la réalité sur le terrain.


Subject(s)
Climate Change , Disaster Planning , Residence Characteristics , Canada , Cities , Disaster Planning/organization & administration , Faith-Based Organizations/organization & administration , Humans , Public Health
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