Creating healthy communities, healthy homes, healthy people: initiating a research agenda on the built environment and public health.

@article{Srinivasan2003CreatingHC,
  title={Creating healthy communities, healthy homes, healthy people: initiating a research agenda on the built environment and public health.},
  author={Shobha Srinivasan and Liam R. O’Fallon and Allen Dearry},
  journal={American journal of public health},
  year={2003},
  volume={93 9},
  pages={
          1446-50
        }
}
Mounting evidence suggests physical and mental health problems relate to the built environment, including human-modified places such as homes, schools, workplaces, parks, industrial areas, farms, roads and highways. The public health relevance of the built environment requires examination. Preliminary research demonstrates the health benefits of sustainable communities. However, the impact of mediating and moderating factors within the built environment on health must be explored further. Given… 
Sorting out the connections between the built environment and health: A conceptual framework for navigating pathways and planning healthy cities
TLDR
To plan for healthy cities, it is argued that to reinvigorate the historic link between urban planning and public health, and thereby conduct informed science to better guide effective public policy.
Therapeutic environments as a catalyst for health, well-being and social equity
ABSTRACT With the increasing prevalence of mental illness, there is an ever-growing need for supportive and rehabilitative social and health services and facilities. In many countries, the healthcare
The Potential for Intersectoral Collaboration in Addressing Rural Health Needs
TLDR
The potential for intersectoral collaboration on the ability of rural communities to positively impact the health of their residents is explored and literature identifying the social construct of health, interrelated determinants ofhealth, and theory of collaboration is presented.
The Pivotal Role of the Social Sciences in Environmental Health Sciences Research
  • Symma Finn, G. Collman
  • Medicine
    New solutions : a journal of environmental and occupational health policy : NS
  • 2016
TLDR
The history of social and behavioral research funding at National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences is outlined and examples of projects that exemplify the value of social science to the environmental health sciences are offered.
Restructuring the built environment to change adult health behaviors: a scoping review integrated with behavior change frameworks
TLDR
This scoping review was one of the first to summarise the impact built environment restructuring has on health outcomes and behaviors and integrate these findings with the Capability-Opportunity-Motivation-Behavior model and Theoretical Domains Framework of behavior change.
Neighborhood effects for aging in place: a transdisciplinary framework toward health-promoting settings
ABSTRACT The premise of promoting aging in place is that neighborhoods can enhance or protect older adults’ health. But progress toward health-promoting settings has been slow in practice given
Healthy Built Environments: Stakeholder engagement in evidence based policy making
TLDR
The objectives were to identify key stakeholders engaged in healthy built environment policy development, and to elucidate insights into effective partnerships, strategies, tools and policy making for improved collaboration in healthy planning evidence based policy and practice.
Housing and health: time again for public health action.
TLDR
Addressing housing issues offers public health practitioners an opportunity to address an important social determinant of health, as well as create healthier homes by confronting substandard housing.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 53 REFERENCES
A holosphere of healthy and sustainable communities.
  • R. Labonté
  • Political Science
    Australian journal of public health
  • 1993
TLDR
There is a need for new intersectoral forums to act upon the knowledge generated by integrative models such as the holosphere, and Canadian Round Tables on Environment and Economy are encouraging examples of such inter sectoralism.
The built environment and children's health.
Housing and health: time again for public health action.
TLDR
Addressing housing issues offers public health practitioners an opportunity to address an important social determinant of health, as well as create healthier homes by confronting substandard housing.
Health, environment and sustainable development: identifying links and indicators to promote action.
TLDR
The need for integrated action at all levels is discussed and, in particular, on the need to focus on long-term action directed at reducing the driving forces that generate the environmental health threats.
Promoting social cohesion to improve health.
  • M. Fullilove
  • Sociology
    Journal of the American Medical Women's Association
  • 1998
TLDR
Four case studies of efforts to strengthen community in four distinct US cities are presented, suggesting that interventions can promote social cohesion, thereby recreating the social foundation for good health.
Promoting social cohesion to improve health.
The disintegration of communities places stress on the well-being of residents. This paper presents four case studies of efforts to strengthen community in four distinct US cities. They are based on
Criteria for healthy urban environments.
  • D. Cappon
  • Medicine
    Canadian journal of public health = Revue canadienne de sante publique
  • 1991
TLDR
The proposed indicators for the city's and the citizens' "sickness" and health are intended to form a matrix, modified by experience, which may generate a database for monitoring changes and be applied to studies comparing the health of the built environment with that of its human inhabitants, and its natural environment.
Urban Sprawl and Public Health
  • H. Frumkin
  • Political Science
    Public health reports
  • 2002
This article discusses the relationship between sprawl and health based on eight considerations: air pollution, heat, physical activity patterns, motor vehicle crashes, pedestrian injuries and
Indicators of Environmental Health in the Urban Setting
  • T. Hancock
  • Medicine
    Canadian journal of public health = Revue canadienne de sante publique
  • 2002
TLDR
The concepts of environmental viability, ecological sustainability, urban livability, community conviviality, social equity, and economic adequacy are discussed in relation to human health and are used to organize proposed candidate indicators for urban ecosystems and public health.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...