| Literature DB >> 33072687 |
Nomi S Weiss-Laxer1, AliceAnn Crandall2, Mary Elizabeth Hughes3, Anne W Riley3.
Abstract
Families are vastly overlooked in US initiatives to promote population health and health equity despite being the most proximal context for health across the life course. We urge the public health sector to take the lead in recognizing families as essential for promoting 21st century population health. We highlight ways families influence health by providing context, care, continuity, and connections. The dual private and public aspect of families has contributed to how they have been overlooked in the public health sector. We provide recommendations for better integrating families into population health initiatives through national health goals, research, education, policy, and practice.Entities:
Keywords: families in public health; family health; family policy; family science; family-focused
Year: 2020 PMID: 33072687 PMCID: PMC7530559 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.00503
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Unique influences of families on health.
| Adults' skills, capacities, needs, and resources create physical and social living environments that vary in terms of safety, predictability, caring, access to resources, health care when sick. | The myriad aspects of the family environment individually and collectively support or hinder health-related actions. | |
| Nurturance early in life, support throughout life, and sharing of nutritional, health care, and other tangible resources are ways families provide the foundation for health and coping. | Family members, especially adults, communicate their caring through verbal and non-verbal communication, shared time together, food preparation, and sharing of meals. | |
| Positive, long-term relationships are health-promoting through the dependability and predictability they provide. | One's experience that others are accessible provides security and meaning; helps prevent isolation, loneliness. Family celebrations support continuity. | |
| Health is shaped by opportunities for learning and growing, and also by the inter-relationships that give life meaning. Families can and often do assist in both. | Family members understand members' needs and often help to identify others outside the family who can help create opportunities and/or enrich relationships. |