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Preparing for the future of public health: ecological determinants of health and the call for an eco-social approach to public health education.

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TLDR
It is argued that an intentionally eco-social approach to education is needed to better support the health sector’s role in protecting and promoting health, preventing disease and injury, and reducing health inequities.
Abstract
As a collective organized to address the education implications of calls for public health engagement on the ecological determinants of health, we, the Ecological Determinants Group on Education (cpha.ca/EDGE), urge the health community to properly understand and address the importance of the ecological determinants of the public's health, consistent with long-standing calls from many quarters-including Indigenous communities-and as part of an eco-social approach to public health education, research and practice. Educational approaches will determine how well we will be equipped to understand and respond to the rapid changes occurring for the living systems on which all life-including human life-depends. We revisit findings from the Canadian Public Health Association's discussion paper on 'Global Change and Public Health: Addressing the Ecological Determinants of Health', and argue that an intentionally eco-social approach to education is needed to better support the health sector's role in protecting and promoting health, preventing disease and injury, and reducing health inequities. We call for a proactive approach, ensuring that the ecological determinants of health become integral to public health education, practice, policy, and research, as a key part of wider societal shifts required to foster a healthy, just, and ecologically sustainable future.

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Sustaining human health: A requirements engineering perspective

TL;DR: The 2019 Requirements Engineering for Well-Being, Aging, and Health (REWBAH) workshop as discussed by the authors focused on addressing the challenge of how Requirements Engineering knowledge and practices can be applied to the development of information systems that support and promote long-lasting, sustained, and healthier behavior and choices by individuals.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Safeguarding human health in the Anthropocene epoch: report of The Rockefeller Foundation–Lancet Commission on planetary health

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify three categories of challenges that have to be addressed to maintain and enhance human health in the face of increasingly harmful environmental trends: conceptual and empathy failures (imagination challenges), such as an overreliance on gross domestic product as a measure of human progress, the failure to account for future health and environmental harms over present day gains, and the disproportionate eff ect of those harms on the poor and those in developing nations.
Book

Ecological Public Health: Reshaping the Conditions for Good Health

TL;DR: The Transitions which Public Health has to Address and the Implications of Ecological Public Health are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Securing ‘supportive environments’ for health in the face of ecosystem collapse: meeting the triple threat with a sociology of creative transformation

TL;DR: Drawing on sociological theory, and specifically practice theory and the work of Pierre Bourdieu, it is advocated rethinking education for social change by attending more adequately to the social conditions of transformative learning and cultural change.
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