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Healthy Cities, Municipalities and Communities: A Global Perspective

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Places health on the agenda of cities around the world ... Altona, Benalla, Broadmeadows, Coburg, Colac, Maffra Shire. Ottawa Charter ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Healthy Cities, Municipalities and Communities: A Global Perspective


1
Healthy Cities, Municipalities and CommunitiesA
Global Perspective
  • Dr Iain Butterworth
  • Deakin University

2
The WHO Healthy Cities project
  • A long-term, comprehensive, community-based
    development project
  • Places health on the agenda of cities around the
    world
  • Addresses the broad range of factors that
    influence the health and quality of life in
    cities
  • Builds a constituency of support for public
    health at the local level
  • Born in 1984 at Beyond Healthcare conference,
    Toronto
  • Healthy islands, villages and municipalities
  • 10,000 projects worldwide

(National Civic League, 1998 Tsouros, 1994)
3
Characteristics of Healthy Cities Projects
  • Commitment to health
  • Political decision-making
  • Intersectoral action
  • Community participation
  • Innovation
  • Healthy public policy

(Duhl Sanchez, 1999)
4
11 key parameters for healthy cities and
communities (Hancock Duhl, 1988)
  • A clean, safe, high-quality environment
  • A stable, sustainable ecosystem
  • A strong, mutually supportive community.
  • A high degree of public participation in and
    control over the decisions affecting life, health
    and wellbeing.
  • The meeting of basic needs (food, water, shelter,
    income, safety, work) for all people.

5
11 key parameters
  • Access to a wide variety of experiences and
    resources, with the possibility of multiple
    contacts, interaction and communication.
  • A diverse, vital and innovative economy.
  • Encouragement of connections with the past, with
    the varied cultural and biological heritage and
    with other groups and individuals.

6
11 key parameters
  • A city form (design) that is compatible with and
    enhances the preceding parameters and forms of
    behaviour.
  • An optimum level of appropriate public health and
    sick care services accessible to all.
  • High health status (both high positive health
    status and low disease status).

7
Healthy Cities Europe
  • Large cities, local government plays key role as
    both planner and health provider
  • May be administered at the senior corporate level
  • Huge bureaucratic program
  • Legacy of theory and practice
  • Strategy, methodology

8
Healthy Cities and Communities - USA
  • Cultural values of individualism and minimal
    involvement by the State in corporate affairs
  • Pseudo-anarchic process, more like the
    development of Linux
  • Reflects state of health care system
  • History of involvement of health care industry
  • Connotations of health in USA

9
Healthy Cities - Taiwan
  • Confucian tradition
  • Integration of politics and academe
  • Government support for collaboration across
    sectors
  • New democracy
  • Reaction to China

10
Healthy Cities - Canada
  • Began with tripartite system of planners, public
    health and local government
  • Has aimed at promoting economic sustainability of
    programs

11
Healthy Cities - Australia
  • Canberra, Illawarra, Nourlanga
  • Cultural expectations of government
  • 2nd International Conference on Health Promotion,
    Adelaide, 1988
  • South Australian Community Health Research Unit
    (SACHRU), Department of Public Health, Flinders
    University
  • Healthy Localities Victoria, 1989-1993
  • Victorian Municipal Public Health Planning
    Legislation

12
Victorian Healthy Localities Project, 1989 1993
  • Six Healthy Localities projects funded a total of
    3m
  • Altona, Benalla, Broadmeadows, Coburg, Colac,
    Maffra Shire
  • Ottawa Charter
  • Social model of health / social determinants
  • Emphasis on community participation, capacity
    building
  • Collaborative planning between local government
    and their communities

13
Victorian Healthy Localities Project, 1989 1993
  • Aimed to assist non-award councils and their
    communities to engage in similar systemic health
    promotion
  • Informed development of Victorian Municipal
    Public Health Planning
  • Garrard Schofield (1991) Evaluation of MPHP
    pilot program
  • Systematic evaluation on effectiveness of
    strategies to create supportive environments and
    change behaviors
  • Garrard, Hawe Graham (1995)

14
Alliance for Healthy Cities
www.alliance-healthycities.com/
  • Auspiced by the World Health Organization
    Regional Office for the Western Pacific
  • Will provide opportunities to
  • share experiences of Healthy Cities,
  • recognize and promote outstanding practice and
    innovation
  • mobilize resources
  • develop new knowledge and technology for the
    advancement of Healthy Cities through
    international collaboration.

15
Alliance for Healthy Cities
  • Full Member
  • City governments,
  • Governing units of cities/municipalities/equivalen
    t organizations
  • Associate Member
  • Individuals
  • Non-government organizations
  • National government agencies
  • Private organizations
  • International agencies
  • Academic institutions

16
Alliance for Healthy Cities
  • US500.00 per year
  • WHO Awards for Healthy Cities
  • Secretariat of the Alliance for Healthy Cities
  • c/o WHO Collaborating Center for Healthy Cities
    and Urban Policy Research, alliance.ith_at_tmd.ac.jp

17
Alliance 20 Full Member Cities
  • Cambodia
  • China
  • Japan
  • Republic of Korea
  • Malaysia
  • Mongolia
  • Vietnam

18
Alliance for Healthy Cities Associate Members
  • South Australian Community Health Research Unit
    (SACHRU), Department of Public Health, Flinders
    University Adelaide, South Australia
  • Healthy Cities Illawarra
  • Healthy Cities Noarlunga (Member of the Steering
    Committee)
  • Centre for Health Education and Health Promotion,
    The Chinese University of Hong Kong Hong Kong
    (Member of the Steering Committee)
  • Health Promotion/International Health, Division
    of Public Health, Tokyo Medical and Dental
    University Tokyo
  • National Coordinator of Healthy Cities Malaysia
    National Agency (Member of the Steering
    Committee)

19
Documentation for joining the Alliance
  • Written policy statement in support of Healthy
    Cities
  • Future vision and goal
  • Profile of the city (baseline data)
  • Analysis of priority health problems

20
Other documentation for joining the Alliance
  • Intersectoral coordination mechanism in place
  • Mechanism for community participation
  • Local action plan to resolve the problems
  • A set of indicators for monitoring and evaluation
  • A system of information dissemination and sharing

21
Opportunities for Victoria
  • Link Victorian local governments to International
    Alliance for Healthy Cities
  • Strengthen visibility of Victorian local
    governments
  • Leverage in related policy areas eg Melbourne
    2030

22
Opportunities for Victoria
  • Share policy framework with colleagues in other
    Australian states
  • International networking
  • Learn from international approaches
  • Share expertise with cities across Western
    Pacific
  • Publishing Victorian experience models of best
    practice
  • Theoretical perspectives
  • Healthy Cities Alliance Conference, China 2006

23
Opportunities for Collaboration
  • Deakin University Healthy Cities Short Course
    2005
  • Visit by Prof Leonard Duhl
  • Visit from international practitioners
  • Collaborations with Universities across Australia
  • Research collaborations with Planning Institute
    of Australia, VCOSS, DVC, DHS
  • Consulting nationally and internationally
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