HealthyPlan.City:支持加拿大社区城市环境平等和公共健康的网络工具

Dany Doiron, Eleanor M. Setton, Joey Syer, Andre Redivo, Allan McKee, Mohammad Noaeen, Priya Patel, Gillian L. Booth, Michael Brauer, Daniel Fuller, Yan Kestens, Laura C. Rosella, Dave Stieb, Paul J. Villeneuve, Jeffrey R. Brook
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引用次数: 0

摘要

空气质量、热岛以及绿色空间和社区设施的使用等城市环境因素都会影响公众健康。一些弱势群体,如低收入群体、儿童、老年人、新移民和有色人种,生活在有利条件较少的地区,因此面临更大的健康风险。规划和倡导公平健康的城市环境需要对可靠的空间数据进行系统分析,以确定弱势群体与积极或消极的城市/环境特征的交叉点。为了促进加拿大在这方面的努力,我们开发了 HealthyPlan.City (https://healthyplan.city/),这是一个免费提供的网络制图平台,用户可以直观地看到加拿大 125 个以上城市的建筑环境指标、弱势群体和环境不平等的空间模式。该工具可帮助用户识别加拿大城市中弱势群体比例相对较高但有益环境条件水平低于平均水平的区域,我们将其称为公平优先区域。HealthyPlan.City 使用来自卫星图像和其他大型地理空间数据库的全国标准化环境数据,以及来自加拿大人口普查的人口数据,提供了加拿大城市环境不平等的逐街区快照。该工具旨在支持城市规划者、公共卫生专业人士、政策制定者和社区组织者确定在哪些街区对当地环境进行有针对性的投资和改善,从而同时帮助社区解决环境不平等问题、促进公共卫生和适应气候变化。在本文中,我们将报告我们在开发该工具过程中的主要考虑因素,并介绍当前基于网络的应用程序。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

HealthyPlan.City: A Web Tool to Support Urban Environmental Equity and Public Health in Canadian Communities

HealthyPlan.City: A Web Tool to Support Urban Environmental Equity and Public Health in Canadian Communities

Urban environmental factors such as air quality, heat islands, and access to greenspaces and community amenities impact public health. Some vulnerable populations such as low-income groups, children, older adults, new immigrants, and visible minorities live in areas with fewer beneficial conditions, and therefore, face greater health risks. Planning and advocating for equitable healthy urban environments requires systematic analysis of reliable spatial data to identify where vulnerable populations intersect with positive or negative urban/environmental characteristics. To facilitate this effort in Canada, we developed HealthyPlan.City (https://healthyplan.city/), a freely available web mapping platform for users to visualize the spatial patterns of built environment indicators, vulnerable populations, and environmental inequity within over 125 Canadian cities. This tool helps users identify areas within Canadian cities where relatively higher proportions of vulnerable populations experience lower than average levels of beneficial environmental conditions, which we refer to as Equity priority areas. Using nationally standardized environmental data from satellite imagery and other large geospatial databases and demographic data from the Canadian Census, HealthyPlan.City provides a block-by-block snapshot of environmental inequities in Canadian cities. The tool aims to support urban planners, public health professionals, policy makers, and community organizers to identify neighborhoods where targeted investments and improvements to the local environment would simultaneously help communities address environmental inequities, promote public health, and adapt to climate change. In this paper, we report on the key considerations that informed our approach to developing this tool and describe the current web-based application.

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