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Week 13 - the future of public health promotion - Coggle Diagram
Week 13 - the future of public health promotion
Health Promotion in Canada has changed over the last 40 years and will continue to adapt to new challenges posed by todays world.
Canada is a global role model in health promotion.
The Ottawa charter serves as a constant guide of core principles for ongoing changes.
Climate Chage, Migration, conflict and gender based inequities are just a few examples of how public health promotion has had to and will need to continue adapting.
Progress in intersectoral collaboration and in a shift towards population health promotion are proof of progress
There are a number of models that can support an equitable and impactful way forward in health promotion.
The sustainable development goals offer a helpful framework and grounding in One Health and Planetary Health.
However, we much be conscious as health promoters not to only make loft future goals, but to evaluate on an ongoing basis the status of the goal, progress and environment.
The Doughnut Model is a visual framework for sustainable development that relates our lives to planetary boundaries through active codesign
Health promotion must harness the power of designing our built and social environments
Health in all Policy
This has become more prevalent in the time of covid as everyone has become concerned with health and all sectors have become involved
Stephan Van den Broucke shares how learnings from COVID can support the future of Health Promotion.
COVID promoted health in all policies but was mainly focused on prevention, not health promotion.
We saw how the health belief model was at play - people will only change their behaviour if they feel they are personally at risk, they perceive the risk as severe, the preventative method is effective and they believe they can perform the behaviour.
Information bias and health literacy play a large role in how messages are received, how behaviour is adapted, and whether health is impacted.
Much of this article does not focus on health promotion as the changing of environments and social contexts, but focuses largely on how to effectively adapt behaviours.
Community engagement is critically important
Health promotion must be thought of as more than a human problem.
COVID reinforced the idea that human, environmental and animal health are inextricably connected.
Planetary and ONE health models should be more widely considered.
Built environments, natural environments and social environments impact our health and our behaviour
Health Promotion must be able to adapt to the unpredictable.
The future of health promotion must critically address the root causes of health inequity issues, rather than continually focussing on surface level causes.
Addressing policies, economies cultural and environmental causes
the avoidance of addressing these root causes are at the core of why COVID became such an issue of equity with widespread comorbidities
3 example themes were developed to describe how this dismantling should be discussed
Breaking News
Breaking Free
Breaking Through