Environmental Health

 

This project is developed in collaboration with the CDC Division for Emergency and Enviromental Health Services and the CDC Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity

 


 

 

Climate change is a significant and emerging threat to public health. It changes the way we look at promoting health in particular that of vulnerable and disadvantaged populations in low and middle income countries. The evidence that humans are affecting global climate and thus influencing human health, growingly contributes to the global burden of disease. A major concern is that climate change will increasingly impact on the distribution of health and its determinants and inevitably worsen health inequities at the global level making the most vulnerable more vulnerable. Climate change-related health risks are however avoidable through existing programmes/ interventions.

 

IUHPE is engaged in concerted action to strengthen programmes and interventions using a health promotion approach focusing on advocacy and capacity building, in particular in low and middle income countries.


There is existing evidence that current accelerated urbanization and globalization processes are linked to drastic changes in the ways of life resulting in increased sedentary lifestyles, unhealthy nutrition habits and tobacco consumption, subsequently deteriorating the health of our populations, urges for inter-sectoral actions, both at the political, civil society and community levels to promote healthy environments, using socially and culturally adapted advocacy strategies and building local capacity to face the challenges of preventing NCDs.


Latin America has and continues to experience rapid urbanization, with rising magnitude, pattern of inactivity and other detrimental factors to health. The IUHPE supports intersectoral interventions to address NCDs in low- and middle-income countries. In particular, in Colombia, the IUHPE supported these efforts through an initiative dedicated to bridging the gap between evidence and action through capacity building and advocacy actions to face the chronic disease epidemic in six cities in Colombia. The project followed three lines of action: physical activity and supportive environments, tobacco control and healthy eating. It aimed:

 

 

Links to collaborators and key initiatives

CDC Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity - DNPAO

CDC National Center for Environmental Health Division of Emergency and Environmental Health Services - EEHS

Ciclovía Recreativa

Fundación FES Social

GUIA Project (Guide for Useful Interventions for Activity in Brazil and Latin America)

International Devlopment Research Center of Canada