Tools for Thoughtful Action: The Role of Ecosystem Approaches to Health in Enhancing Public Health

被引:0
作者
Jena C. Webb
Donna Mergler
Margot W. Parkes
Johanne Saint-Charles
Jerry Spiegel
David Waltner-Toews
Annalee Yassi
Robert F. Woollard
机构
[1] CoPEH-Canada,Centre de recherche interdisciplinaire sur la biologie, la santé, la société et l’environnement (CINBIOSE)
[2] Université du Québec à Montréal,Health Sciences Programs, University of Northern British Columbia and Northern Medical Program
[3] University of British Columbia,School of Population and Public Health
[4] University of British Columbia,Department of Population Medicine
[5] University of Guelph,College for Interdisciplinary Studies
[6] University of British Columbia,Department of Family Practice
[7] University of British Columbia,CINBIOSE
[8] Université du Québec à Montréal,undefined
来源
Canadian Journal of Public Health | 2010年 / 101卷
关键词
Environment; public health; determinants; community participation; social environment; gender identity; environnement; santé publique; déterminants; participation communautaire; environnement social; identité sexuelle;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The intimate interdependence of human health and the ecosystems in which we are embedded is now a commonplace observation. For much of the history of public health, this was not so obvious. After over a century of focus on diseases, their biologic causes and the correction of exposures (clean water and air) and facilitation of responses (immunizations and nutrition), public health discourse shifted to embrace the concept of determinants of health as extending to social, economic and environmental realms. This moved the discourse and science of public health into an unprecedented level of complexity just as public concern about the environment heightened. To address multifactorial, dynamic impacts on health, a new paradigm was needed which would overcome the separation of humans and ecosystems. Ecosystem approaches to health arose in the 1990s from a rich background of intellectual ferment as Canada wrestled with diverse problems ranging from Great Lakes contamination to zoonotic diseases. Canada’s International Development Research Centre (IDRC) played a lead role in supporting an international community of scientists and scholars who advanced ecosystem approaches to health. These collective efforts have enabled a shift to a research paradigm that embraces transdisciplinarity, social justice, gender equity, multi-stakeholder participation and sustainability.
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页码:439 / 441
页数:2
相关论文
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