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Volume 31, Issue 4: August, 2004
Abstract
Environmental Health Promotion Interventions: Considerations
for Preparation and Practice
Michelle Crozier Kegler, DrPH, MPH, Kathleen Miner, PhD,
MPH
Interventions to address current, future, and potential public
health dilemmas, such as air pollution, urban sprawl, brown
field reclamation, and threats of intentional toxic exposures
would benefit from a synergy between the disciplines of environmental
health and health education. A comparison between the Protocol
for Assessing Community Excellence in Environmental Health
and the PRECEDE-PROCEED model used in health education illustrates
some similarities and differences in terminology, assessment
procedures, intervention design, and types of evidence used
by the two disciplines. Promising intervention strategies
draw on the expertise of both fields and include social action,
policy and media advocacy, coalition building, organizational
change, lay health advisers, risk communication, and tailored
educational messages. Appropriate targets of change can range
from the equitable distribution of resources to individual
behavior change. Significant interdisciplinary evaluation
research is necessary to accelerate the identification of
successful models for reducing the burden of environmental
health problems in communities.
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