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Planetary Health - Coggle Diagram
Planetary Health
- Health promotion, based on the Ottawa Charter, has key principles to support global action on health, including:
Advocacy- highlight the human right to health and suggests political action to support attaining it.
Enabling: health promotion’s focus on the empowerment of people and communities to take control over their health and aspirations
Mediation: draws attention to the critical intersectoral partnerships required to address health and social inequities.
- Key health promotion principles, including, rights, empowerment and partnerships are important to be framed within the context of the sustainable development goals to create more clear pathways to health equity and better define the nature and scope of health promotion work in the future. Three framings presented:
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- There is an immediate need for health promotion practitioners to shift and adopt more of an ecological view of health and prioritize sustainable development if health promotion is to remain relevant and prevention-oriented.
Shift required from Western world-views that favour reductionist approaches to (w)hol(e)istic and relational ways that are characteristic of many Indigenous paradigms
Need to acknowledge that global environmental problems are rooted in injustice and colonization and have their origins in Western worldviews
- Covid-19 epidemic poses a challenge at all levels in the built environment.
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- Indigenous ways of being in the world emphasize interdependence and reciprocal stewardship with all of our relations in the natural world and offer solutions for advancing health promotion.
Indigenous Health Promotion aims to strengthen cultural identity and emphasizes the need to address the determinants of health, thereby improving health and wellbeing as Indigenous peoples according to Indigenous values, the vitality of communities and the position of Indigenous peoples in wider societies
challenge power differentials, support community development, and create settings where individual and collective potential can be realized.
concerns that drive Indigenous health promotion include: self-determination, land-based learning, decolonization, health equity, environmental sustainability, cultural and linguistic integrity, and resurgence