Urban environmental health hazards and health equity
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Date
Authors
Kjellstrom, Tord
Dixon, Jane
Corvalan, Carlos
Rehfuess, Eva
Campbell-Lendrum, Diarmid
Gore, Fiona
Bartram, Jamie
Friel, Sharon
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Verlag
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 BImproving the living
environment^ prepared for the World Health Organization Commission on Social
Determinants of Health, Knowledge Network on Urban Settings.
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Source
Journal of Urban Health: Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine 84.1 (2007): 86-97