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EDITORIAL

Creating healthy, just and eco-sensitive cities

Anthony G. Capon A B C and Jane M. Dixon B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Australian Health Policy Institute, The University of Sydney.

B National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, The Australian National University.

C Corresponding author. Email: acapon@med.usyd.edu.au

NSW Public Health Bulletin 18(4) 37-40 https://doi.org/10.1071/NB07065
Published: 8 June 2007

This issue introduces the first of two special issues of the NSW Public Health Bulletin that examine health and cities. This issue introduces the topic and identifies the challenges for public health workers and their counterparts in urban management (urban, transport and social planners, environmental engineers and auditors, sustainability officers and others) and the land development and infrastructure sectors of industry. The second issue will focus on ways to move forward by describing urban planning and design approaches to enhance population health.


Cities: the dominant human habitat

Cities can be great places in which to live. Currently, 90% of the Australian population chooses to live in urban settlements. People are attracted to cities for many reasons, including the availability of employment, education, social and cultural opportunities, and access to shops, food outlets, health care and other services.

The United Nations has estimated that during 2007 the human species will become a predominantly urban species; for the first time in human history more than half of all people will live in cities.1 Consequently, the governance of cities is increasingly important for human futures. Those responsible should manage our cities in the interests of both human health and the health of the environment.


Cities, sustainability and health

The way people live in cities affects their health by influencing levels of physical activity, food choices, safety, social connection and participation, and exposure to pollutants. These influences are determinants of common, contemporary health problems such as obesity, diabetes, heart disease, some cancers, depression, injury and asthma. The way people live in cities also affects the health of the environment through loss of biodiversity, changes to ecosystems, carbon dioxide emissions and the production of other pollutants. These environmental changes, in turn, have feedback impacts on human health.

Within cities there is inequity in access to infrastructure and other resources.2 This applies to transport (mass transit, in particular), healthy food outlets, other shops, parks, libraries and health and community services, and creates barriers to good health and environmental outcomes in both large cities and smaller urban settlements.

These are the challenges we will explore in two special issues of the Bulletin. While health workers have a discourse on ‘urban health’,3 urbanists have a discourse on ‘sustainable cities’.4 Here we seek an integrated perspective on cities, sustainability and health, and present emerging ecological approaches and systems thinking.


Paradigm shift

Concerns about urban sustainability and population health are not new. For example, the Australian National University established the Hong Kong Human Ecology Program in the early 1970s. This was supported by the United Nations Educational, Cultural and Scientific Organization and was the first attempt to understand the ecology of a city and its human population in a holistic and integrated way.5 This program demonstrated that the actions necessary to protect the biosphere correspond substantially with those required to maintain and improve the quality of human life experience.

In the 1980s, the World Health Organization established the Healthy Cities initiative.6 The goal of Healthy Cities projects is the integration of health in decision-making in cities, through partnerships between public and private sectors and community participation. Several Australian cities have become Healthy Cities, including Illawarra and Blacktown in New South Wales and Noarlunga in South Australia.

In recent years, there has been a paradigm shift in the way public health workers think about health and the urban environment.7 This shift reflects an improved understanding of the importance of environmental determinants of health and has been enabled by new approaches to research.8 During 2004, the Year of the Built Environment in Australia, there were many activities and events designed to raise awareness about urban environmental issues. The NSW Government Architect initiated a healthy environments project and published a booklet on the topic.9 The booklet contains 11 essays about health and the environment by researchers and practitioners in the field.

The Standing Committee on Environment and Heritage in the Australian House of Representatives reported on the sustainability of cities in 2005. The Committee is now inquiring into a charter and commission for sustainability in Australia. The response to these inquiries has the potential to shape the future of Australian cities. It is important that population health is a central consideration in the response as cities cannot be sustainable unless they are healthy places in which to live.10


2006 Fenner Conference on the Environment

The Australian Academy of Science hosted a Fenner Conference on the topic Urbanism, Environment and Health in Canberra in May 2006. The conference examined ways of living in cities and the consequences for our health and for the environment. It was delivered through a partnership between those interested in population health and urban environments, and included perspectives from research, policy, the private sector and the community. More information, including abstracts and audio recordings, is available on the conference website.11

Following the Fenner Conference, The Sydney Morning Herald published a series of articles on Sick Cities in August 2006, including case studies reviewed by Dr Chris Rissel, director of health promotion with Sydney South West Area Health Service. The Herald maintains a multimedia website on this topic, with the articles and additional audio and video material.12

The papers in this issue have been developed from presentations at the 2006 Fenner Conference. McMichael provides a concise history of cities and public health from the industrial era to the present, with a focus on Australia and England. He highlights major urban health penalties and responses to them. He emphasises the importance of ensuring human health is a central consideration in the sustainability discourse, for both policy and practice.

Howe argues for a renewed focus on urban policy in Australia. She is persuasive about the need for effective governance to enable the three levels of government in Australia to work with the community and the private sector to develop healthy and sustainable cities. Kearns, Beaty and Barnett from CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems present an extended urban metabolism model as a framework for linking urban resource inputs to the spatial patterns and organisational processes of urban consumption. They identify important relationships between urban metabolism and human health.

Capon and Blakely propose a checklist for healthy and sustainable communities. The checklist identifies attributes of urban environments that affect the health of residents and the health of the environment. It is intended to stimulate debate and could be developed as a tool for government and industry.

Box 113–17 contains a glossary of the terms used in these two special issues that may be unfamiliar to the usual readership of the Bulletin.


Meeting the challenge

Boyden has proposed a conceptual framework to represent the biophysical and cultural components of systems.18 This framework can help us to understand the urban system and the impact of changes to variables within the system. The framework has utility as a tool for the planning and evaluation of interventions.

Health impact assessment is another tool for applying public health analysis to the built environment.8 The Centre for Health Equity Training, Research and Evaluation at University of New South Wales is currently funded by NSW Health to promote the use of equity-focused health impact assessment as a policy, planning and evaluation tool.19 An example of one project under this initiative is the health impact assessment of the Sydney Metropolitan Strategy. A brief report of this follows this editorial.

To achieve healthy, equitable and sustainable cities, it will be necessary to strengthen professional relationships between urbanists and public health workers. Partnerships can be fostered through collaborative projects (both research and intervention), joint workforce development and advocacy. There is also a need for further innovation in scientific method. The science supporting sustainability is an emerging science that seeks to understand the interactions between nature and society.20 Only through such work, across and between traditional disciplines, will we develop the knowledge and approaches necessary to address the challenge of health and cities.

More than 15 years ago, Ashton argued for a new approach to environmental health, a shift from sanitarian to ecologist.21 NSW public health workers should now embrace this challenge. It is through everyday activities that, as citizens, we all experience the highs and lows of city life. For this reason, we should also encourage vigorous debate in the wider community about this important topic.


Box 1.  Glossary
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Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge financial support from the Australian Academy of Science for the 2006 Fenner Conference on the Environment. Additional financial support for the Conference was received from The Australian National University, Sydney West Area Health Service, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, the Australian Government’s Department of Environment and Heritage, Australian Ethical Investment Ltd and Public Health Association of Australia Inc.


References


[1] United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. World urbanization prospects: the 2003 revision. New York: United Nations, 2004. Available at http://www.unpopulation.org [Verified 10 May 2007].

[2] Stilwell F, Jordan K. Who gets what? Analysing economic inequality in Australia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.

[3] Galea S, Vlahov D. Handbook of urban health: populations, methods and practice. New York: Springer, 2005.

[4] Newman P, Kenworthy J. Sustainability and cities: overcoming automobile dependence. Washington DC: Island Press, 1999.

[5] Boyden S, Millar S, Newcombe K, O’Neill B. The ecology of a city and its people. Canberra: Australian National University Press, 1981.

[6] Ashton J,  Grey P,  Barnard K. Healthy cities – WHO’s new public health initiative. Health Promot 1986; 1 319–24.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | [Verified 10 May 2007].

[12] Sick cities. Fast life, slow death. Sydney: The Sydney Morning Herald. Available at http://www.smh.com.au/multimedia/sickcities/index.html [Verified 10 May 2007].

[13] Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. Ecosystems and human well-being. Our human planet: summary for decision-makers. Washington DC: Island Press, 2005.

[14] McGraw-Hill. Dictionary of bioscience. 2nd edn. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2003.

[15] Allaby M, editor. A dictionary of ecology. 3rd edn. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.

[16] World Health Organization. Basic documents. 45th edn. Geneva: WHO, 2005.

[17] The Australian concise Oxford Dictionary. 4th edn. Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 2004.

[18] Boyden S. The biology of civilisation. Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, 2004.

[19] Harris E,  Sainsbury P,  Staff M. Health impact assessment in New South Wales. N S W Public Health Bull 2005; 16 105–6.


[20] McMichael AJ, Butler CD, Folke C. New visions for addressing sustainability. In: Kennedy D, editor. Science Magazine’s State of the Planet 2006–2007. Washington DC: Island Press, 2006. p. 161–166.

[21] Ashton J. Sanitarian becomes ecologist: the new environmental health. BMJ 1991; 302 189–90.
PubMed |