Promoting health equity through the built environment in Duluth, MN: External Resources and Local Evolution Toward Health in All Policies.

Chronicles of health impact assessment Pub Date : 2020-10-01 Epub Date: 2020-11-17 DOI:10.18060/24034
Katrina Smith Korfmacher
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Abstract

Communities, professionals, and researchers recognize that environmental factors contribute to the health inequities experienced by vulnerable populations in the U.S. These environmental health injustices persist despite well-developed systems for both public health and environmental protection. The root cause of these issues is often "siloed" decision-making by separate health and environmental institutions. Health Impact Assessment (HIA) can be an important tool for bridging these silos to promote health equity at the local level. This raises the question: how can external resources best support local initiatives? This paper examines the interaction between national, state, and non-governmental efforts to promote HIA and local actions to promote healthy and equitable built environment in Duluth, MN. A wide range of local activities in Duluth aimed to alter the long term trends, decision processes, and institutions shaping its built environment. These included integrating health in brownfield redevelopment, local land use plans, food access, and transportation decisions. Technical and financial support from external groups played a key role in developing the community's capacity to promote health equity across public, private, and non-profit organizations. These multiple streams of action culminated in the mayor's declaration in 2016 that health and fairness would be adopted as key goals of the city's new Comprehensive Plan. How did such innovative efforts thrive in a small, post-industrial city with limited resources? Duluth's experiences provide insight into how external governmental, funding, academic, and non-profit entities can more effectively, efficiently, and equitably support the evolution of local initiatives.

通过明尼苏达州德卢斯市的建筑环境促进健康公平:外部资源和地方为实现全民健康政策的演变。
社区、专业人士和研究人员都认识到,环境因素是造成美国弱势群体健康不平等的原因之一。尽管公共卫生和环境保护体系都已发展完善,但这些环境健康不公正现象依然存在。造成这些问题的根本原因往往是卫生和环境机构各自为政的 "孤岛式 "决策。健康影响评估(HIA)可以成为弥合这些 "孤岛 "的重要工具,以促进地方层面的健康公平。这就提出了一个问题:外部资源如何才能最好地支持地方倡议?本文探讨了在明尼苏达州德卢斯市,国家、州和非政府组织为促进健康影响评估所做的努力与当地为促进健康和公平的建筑环境所采取的行动之间的相互作用。德卢斯当地开展了广泛的活动,旨在改变长期趋势、决策过程和影响其建筑环境的机构。这些活动包括将健康融入棕地重建、地方土地使用计划、食品获取和交通决策。外部团体提供的技术和资金支持在发展社区促进公共、私营和非营利组织健康公平的能力方面发挥了关键作用。2016 年,市长宣布将把健康和公平作为该市新综合计划的主要目标,将这些多重行动推向高潮。在一个资源有限的后工业化小城市,这些创新努力是如何茁壮成长的?德卢斯的经验为外部政府、资金、学术和非营利实体如何更有效、高效、公平地支持地方倡议的发展提供了启示。
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