| Literature DB >> 17450427 |
Tord Kjellstrom1, Sharon Friel, Jane Dixon, Carlos Corvalan, Eva Rehfuess, Diarmid Campbell-Lendrum, Fiona Gore, Jamie Bartram.
Abstract
This paper outlines briefly how the living environment can affect health. It explains the links between social and environmental determinants of health in urban settings. Interventions to improve health equity through the environment include actions and policies that deal with proximal risk factors in deprived urban areas, such as safe drinking water supply, reduced air pollution from household cooking and heating as well as from vehicles and industry, reduced traffic injury hazards and noise, improved working environment, and reduced heat stress because of global climate change. The urban environment involves health hazards with an inequitable distribution of exposures and vulnerabilities, but it also involves opportunities for implementing interventions for health equity. The high population density in many poor urban areas means that interventions at a small scale level can assist many people, and existing infrastructure can sometimes be upgraded to meet health demands. Interventions at higher policy levels that will create more sustainable and equitable living conditions and environments include improved city planning and policies that take health aspects into account in every sector. Health equity also implies policies and actions that improve the global living environment, for instance, limiting greenhouse gas emissions. In a global equity perspective, improving the living environment and health of the poor in developing country cities requires actions to be taken in the most affluent urban areas of the world. This includes making financial and technical resources available from high-income countries to be applied in low-income countries for urgent interventions for health equity. This is an abbreviated version of a paper on "Improving the living environment" prepared for the World Health Organization Commission on Social Determinants of Health, Knowledge Network on Urban Settings.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17450427 PMCID: PMC1891648 DOI: 10.1007/s11524-007-9171-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Urban Health ISSN: 1099-3460 Impact factor: 3.671
Overview of indicators and issues in the hierarchy of social and environmental health determinants
| DPSEEA level | Indicator items | Key issues |
|---|---|---|
| Driving forces | Population size and structure (age, sex) | Demographic transition |
| Birth rate, fertility | Fertility level | |
| Life expectancy | Aging | |
| Poverty prevalence | Economic development | |
| Social barriers to equality | Economic inequalities | |
| Income distribution | Gender, ethnic, and social discrimination | |
| Economic level and growth (GDP in straight dollars or PPP$) | Globalization | |
| Types of economic activity and trade | Urban/rural development | |
| Health and environment policies and legislation | Urban planning and design | |
| Pressures | Technology use | Knowledge development |
| Energy use | Sustainability | |
| Agricultural land use and production | Resource conservation | |
| Water use, water access | Emergence of deprived urban areas | |
| Availability of sanitation | Infrastructure development | |
| Solid waste volumes | ||
| Hazardous waste volumes | ||
| Transport trends | ||
| Existence of breeding grounds of disease vectors | ||
| State of the environment | Climate, trends | Geographic constraints |
| Air quality | Natural conditions | |
| River water quality | Microenvironmental variations | |
| Ground water contamination | ||
| Drinking water quality | ||
| Food contamination | ||
| Housing quality | ||
| Exposures (it is the differential exposure and vulnerability at the exposure level where we see direct relationships with inequalities in health effects) | Specific exposure studies (air, lead, water, and climate) | Risk transition |
| Studies of specific disease vectors (e.g., mosquitoes) | Exposure hot spots | |
| Workplace environment surveys | Total human exposure | |
| Effects | General health situation, mortality trends | Epidemiologic transition |
| Specific environmental effects | Health inequalities | |
| Environmental burden of disease | ||
| Occupational injuries and diseases | ||
| Traffic crash injuries | ||
| Actions | Policies and programs for prevention at each DPSEEA level | Development of new policies to meet the health challenges of the future |