Assessing Urban Health Inequities through a Multidimensional and Participatory Framework: Evidence from the EURO-HEALTHY

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Assessing Urban Health Inequities through a Multidimensional and Participatory Framework: Evidence from the EURO-HEALTHY Project Ângela Freitas Paula Santana

&

Teresa C. Rodrigues &

# The New York Academy of Medicine 2020

Abstract Urban health inequities often reflect and follow the geographic patterns of inequality in the social, economic and environmental conditions within a city— the so-called determinants of health. Evidence of patterns within these conditions can support decisionmaking by identifying where action is urgent and which policies and interventions are needed to mitigate negative impacts and enhance positive impacts. Within the scope of the EU-funded project EURO-HEALTHY (Shaping EUROpean policies to promote HEALTH equitY), the City of Lisbon was selected as a case study to apply a multidimensional and participatory assessment approach of urban health whose purpose was to inform the evaluation of policies and interventions with potential to address local health gaps. In this paper, we present the set of indicators identified as drivers of urban health inequities within the City of Lisbon, exploring the added value of using a spatial indicator framework Â. Freitas (*) CEGOT-UC, Centre of Studies in Geography and Spatial Planning, University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal e-mail: [email protected] T. C. Rodrigues CEG-IST, Centre for Management Studies of Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal e-mail: [email protected] P. Santana CEGOT-UC, Centre of Studies in Geography and Spatial Planning, Department of Geography and Tourism, University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal e-mail: [email protected]

together with a participation process to orient a placebased assessment and to inform policies aimed at reducing health inequities. Two workshops with a panel of local stakeholders from health and social care services, municipal departments (e.g. urban planning, environment, social rights and education) and nongovernmental and community-based organizations were organized. The aim was to engage local stakeholders to identify locally critical situations and select indicators of health determinants from a spatial equity perspective. To support the analysis, a matrix of 46 indicators of health determinants, with data disaggregated at the city neighbourhood scale, was constructed and was complemented with maps. The panel identified critical situations for urban health equity in 28 indicators across eight intervention axes: economic conditions, social protection and security; education; demographic change; lifestyles and behaviours; physical environment; built environment; road safety and healthcare resources and performance. The geographical distribution of identified critical situations showed that all 24 city neighbourhoods presented one or more problems. A group of neighbourhoods systematically perform worse in most indicators from different intervention axes, requiring not only priority action but mainly a multi- and intersectoral policy response. The indicat