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Respiratory pandemics, urban planning and design: A multidisciplinary rapid review of the literature.
Harris, Patrick; Harris-Roxas, Ben; Prior, Jason; Morrison, Nicky; McIntyre, Erica; Frawley, Jane; Adams, Jon; Bevan, Whitney; Haigh, Fiona; Freeman, Evan; Hua, Myna; Pry, Jennie; Mazumdar, Soumya; Cave, Ben; Viliani, Francesca; Kwan, Benjamin.
Afiliación
  • Harris P; Centre for Health Equity Training, Research & Evaluation (CHETRE), Part of the UNSW Australia Research Centre for Primary Health Care & Equity, A Unit of Population Health, South Western Sydney Local Health District, NSW Health, A member of the Ingham Institute, Liverpool Hospital, Locked Ba
  • Harris-Roxas B; School of Population Health, UNSW, Sydney, Australia.
  • Prior J; Institute for Sustainable Futures, UTS, Australia.
  • Morrison N; Institute for Culture and Society, University of Western Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
  • McIntyre E; Institute for Sustainable Futures, UTS, Australia.
  • Frawley J; Centre of Public and Population Health Research, School of Public Health, Faculty of Health, UTS, Australia.
  • Adams J; Australian Research Centre in Complementary and Integrative Medicine (ARCCIM), School of Public Health, Faculty of Health, UTS, Australia.
  • Bevan W; Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, UK.
  • Haigh F; Centre for Health Equity Training, Research & Evaluation (CHETRE), Part of the UNSW Australia Research Centre for Primary Health Care & Equity, A Unit of Population Health, South Western Sydney Local Health District, NSW Health, A member of the Ingham Institute, Liverpool Hospital, Locked Ba
  • Freeman E; South Eastern Sydney Local Health District, NSW Health, Australia.
  • Hua M; South Eastern Sydney Local Health District, NSW Health, Australia.
  • Pry J; South Western Sydney Local Health District, NSW Health, Australia.
  • Mazumdar S; South Western Sydney Local Health District, NSW Health, Australia.
  • Cave B; Ben Cave Associates, Leeds, UK.
  • Viliani F; International SOS, Denmark.
  • Kwan B; Sleep Medicine, St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
Cities ; 127: 103767, 2022 Aug.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35663146
ABSTRACT
COVID-19 is the most recent respiratory pandemic to necessitate better knowledge about city planning and design. The complex connections between cities and pandemics, however challenge traditional approaches to reviewing literature. In this article we adopted a rapid review methodology. We review the historical literature on respiratory pandemics and their documented connections to urban planning and design (both broadly defined as being concerned with cities as complex systems). Our systematic search across multidisciplinary databases returned a total of 1323 sources, with 92 articles included in the final review. Findings showed that the literature represents the multi-scalar nature of cities and pandemics - pandemics are global phenomena spread through an interconnected world, but require regional, city, local and individual responses. We characterise the literature under ten themes scale (global to local); built environment; governance; modelling; non-pharmaceutical interventions; socioeconomic factors; system preparedness; system responses; underserved and vulnerable populations; and future-proofing urban planning and design. We conclude that the historical literature captures how city planning and design intersects with a public health response to respiratory pandemics. Our thematic framework provides parameters for future research and policy responses to the varied connections between cities and respiratory pandemics.
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Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies / Systematic_reviews Aspecto: Equity_inequality Idioma: En Revista: Cities Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies / Systematic_reviews Aspecto: Equity_inequality Idioma: En Revista: Cities Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Article