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Volume 31, Issue 4: August, 2004
Abstract
Social Determinants of Health: Implications for Environmental
Health Promotion
Amy Schulz, PhD, MPH, Mary E. Northridge, PhD, MPH
In this article, the authors draw on the disciplines of
sociology and environmental and social epidemiology to further
understanding of mechanisms through which social factors contribute
to disparate environmental exposures and health inequalities.
They propose a conceptual framework for environmental health
promotion that considers dynamic social processes through
which social and environmental inequalities—and associated
health disparities—are produced, reproduced, and potentially
transformed. Using empirical evidence from the published literature,
as well as their own practical experiences in conducting community-based
participatory research in Detroit and Harlem, the authors
examine health promotion interventions at various levels (community-wide,
regional, and national) that aim to improve population health
by addressing various aspects of social processes and/or physical
environments. Finally, they recommend moving beyond environmental
remediation strategies toward environmental health promotion
efforts that are sustainable and explicitly designed to reduce
social, environmental, and health inequalities.
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