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Week 13 - Coggle Diagram
Week 13
- Reflexivity as a core tenet of health promotion - committing to reflexivity in health promotion programs, policies, and initiatives in order to ensure the sustainability of these practices for the future
a. Attempting to create practices that are as equitable as possible, for all
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b. Aligning with Indigenous health promotion throughout the process, and putting it into policy
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- Transformative health promotion tackles health inequities at their root causes.
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- Innovation of the current health promotion space is necessary for long-lasting change
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b. Specifically creating space for numerous epistemological frameworks to exist all at once- the knowledge of cultures and peoples globally
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- Future public health emergencies and syndemics can challenge support in health systems, subsequently affecting the ability of health promotion to function.
a. Health promotion can continue to work at downstream, midstream, and upstream levels
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b. Health promotion ceases to function when systems built on the exploitation and systematic marginalization of people are left to operate as is- during public health emergencies, these systems very quickly break down, causing harm to many.
If design perpetuates inequity, the inequities will be exacerbated in the event of emergency
- Canadian health promotion fits within and is influenced by the greater global context, therefore it cannot ignore disruptions to human health and safety that occur outside of Canada.
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b. Also applies to positive, equity based policies and programs applied globally
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