30 results on '"Laverack, G."'
Search Results
2. Germination characteristics of Rhinanthus minor influence field emergence, competitiveness and potential use in restoration projects.
- Author
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Marin, M., Laverack, G., Matthews, S., Powell, A. A., and Pritchard, H.
- Subjects
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GERMINATION , *PLANT biomass , *LOTUS corniculatus , *SEED quality , *GRASSLAND restoration , *PARASITIC plants - Abstract
The facultative root hemi‐parasite Rhinanthus minor is often used in grassland habitat restoration projects to regulate ecosystem structure and function. Its impact on community productivity and diversity as a function of resource supply, sward composition and management has been widely investigated. However, there is a lack of information about the possible influence of seed quality on the efficacy of the hemi‐parasite.Ten seed lots from commercial sources were sown in the field and their germination characteristics investigated in the laboratory. Seeds from four lots were also germinated and sown in pots alongside plants of two host species, Lotus corniculatus and Holcus lanatus. Plant establishment, height and flowering density were evaluated for the hemi‐parasite, while plant biomass was measured for both R. minor and its host.Two aspects of seed quality influenced the field emergence of seed lots of R. minor, the radicle emergence (%) and the length of the lag period from the beginning of imbibition to germination (mean germination time), which indicates seed vigour. A longer lag period (lower vigour) was associated with higher levels of seedling mortality and lower plant vigour, in terms of plant height and biomass accumulation and was also reflected in the parasitic impact of the seed lots.Seed quality, specifically germination and vigour, can influence the establishment, survival, subsequent plant productivity and parasitic impact of R. minor in vegetation restoration projects. Seed quality is discussed as a key factor to consider when predicting the impact of the hemi‐parasite on community productivity and diversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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3. Responses of Primula vulgaris to light quality in the maternal and germination environments.
- Author
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Marin, M., Blandino, C., Laverack, G., Toorop, P., Powell, A.A., and Pritchard, H.
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PRIMROSES ,SEED size ,GERMINATION ,LEAF area ,CHLORELLA vulgaris ,ECOLOGY ,SEED yield - Abstract
In the model species Arabidopsis thaliana phytochromes mediate dormancy and germination responses to seasonal cues experienced during seed maturation on the maternal plants. However, the effect of the maternal light environment on seed germination in native wild species has not been well studied. This is particularly important given its practical application in the context of environmental restoration, when there can be marked changes in the canopy.Plants of Primula vulgaris were grown in the field over two vegetative seasons under four shading treatments from low to high ratio of red to far‐red light (R:FR). Leaf and seed traits were assessed in response to the light treatments. The germination of seeds from these four maternal environments (pre‐dispersal) was investigated at seven light and five temperature treatments (post‐dispersal).Thinner leaves, larger leaf area and greater chlorophyll content were found in plants growing in reduced R:FR. Shading in the maternal environment led to increased seed size and yield, although the conditions experienced by the maternal plants had no effect on seed germination. Seeds responded strongly to the cues experienced in their immediate germination environment. Germination was always enhanced under higher R:FR conditions.The observed phenotypic trait variation plays a major role in the ability of P. vulgaris to grow in a wide range of light conditions. However, the increased germination capacity in response to a higher R:FR for all maternal environments suggests potential for seedling establishment under vegetative shade only in the presence of canopy gaps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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4. Scottish Wildflower Seeds: Production and Use.
- Author
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Laverack, G., Matthews, S., Powell, A. A., and Hosseini, M. Khajeh
- Subjects
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WILD flowers , *SEEDS , *BIODIVERSITY , *PLANT ecology , *SEED industry - Abstract
In this brief review, the use of wild flower seeds is described as a contribution to the enhancement of biodiversity and as a way of improving grassland and other plant communities. Ecological concerns about sowing seeds in locations that are climatically contrasted to the countries from which the seed is sourced are discussed. Characteristics that aid the spread and survival of normally uncultivated species create difficulties in seed production and use. Establishment of a crop for seed production and subsequent weed control can be troublesome and procedures to achieve these have been developed based on experience. Harvesting methods are selected and modified to suit the maturity and dispersal characteristics of different species. Drying and processing, to ensure the removal of a large proportion of the unwanted material,such as appendages that aid wind dispersal, insect parts and weed seeds, can consist of as many as 10 stages for some species. As the final stage in production, seed quality control of wild flower seeds through germination testing has not been routine in the past. Our research has identified appropriate dormancy breaking treatments for a range of species, so that we currently can test the quality of seeds both from different harvest years and periods of storage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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5. A planning framework for community empowerment goals within health promotion.
- Author
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Laverack, G and Labonte, R
- Abstract
Health promotion often comprises a tension between 'bottom-up' and 'top-down' programming. The former, more associated with concepts of community empowerment, begins on issues of concern to particular groups or individuals, and regards some improvement in their overall power or capacity as the important health outcome. The latter, more associated with disease prevention efforts, begins by seeking to involve particular groups or individuals in issues and activities largely defined by health agencies, and regards improvement in particular behaviours as the important health outcome. Community empowerment is viewed more instrumentally as a means to the end of health behaviour change. The tension between these two approaches is not unresolvable, but this requires a different orientation on the part of those responsible for planning more conventional, top-down programmes. This article presents a framework intended to assist planners, implementers and evaluators to systematically consider community empowerment goals within top-down health promotion programming. The framework 'unpacks' the tensions in health promotion at each stage of the more conventional, top-down programme cycle, by presenting a parallel 'empowerment' track. The framework also presents a new technology for the assessment and strategic planning of nine identified 'domains' that represent the organizational influences on the process of community empowerment. Future papers analyze the design of this assessment and planning methodology, and discuss the findings of its field-testing in rural communities in Fiji. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
6. Role and challenges to digital technologies in community health promotion programs in Italy during the COVID-19 pandemic: a multiple embedded case study protocol.
- Author
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Del Riccio M, Costantini L, Guasconi M, Casella G, Fanfani A, Cosma C, Mindrican P, Bonaccorsi G, Corradini E, Artioli G, Sarli L, Laverack G, Rondini E, and Martucci G
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- Humans, Digital Technology, Health Promotion, Pandemics prevention & control, Italy epidemiology, COVID-19 epidemiology, Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
Background and Aim: Due to the COVID-19 pandemics, The Italian League Against Cancer (LILT), a national federation of local associations promoting cancer prevention, had to face the challenge to find new ways and technologies to promote health in their territories. This study aims to explore how LILT associations led their health promotion interventions during the COVID-19 pandemic and to understand which interventions had a greater impact, for which population group, and why., Methods: In this descriptive multiple embedded case study, each case will focus on the activities of a local LILT association and their collaborators on the perception and experience of the use of digital technology for health promotion and prevention, through interviews, observations, and a study of products and artifacts. A general overview of each case study will be provided, along with an introduction of the unit(s) of more in-depth analysis. The logical models that emerge from the analysis of each case will be described by using realist analysis, producing a list of possible CMO configurations (Context; Mechanisms; Outcomes). The final report will consist of a cross-case analysis (a comparison between the different case studies)., Discussion: This multiple case study will help generate a first "theory of the use of digital technology in health promotion in local LILT communities. The observation of what local LILT associations in Italy have done during COVID-19 will help identify new and useful health promotion strategies based on these technologies.
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- 2023
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7. The Nordic perspective on migration and empowerment.
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Dahl BM, Buch Mejsner S, Eklund Karlsson L, Kostenius C, Laverack G, Andersen HM, Warne M, and Lidmark J
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- Finland, Humans, Norway, Scandinavian and Nordic Countries, Sweden, Transients and Migrants
- Abstract
International migration is a complex phenomenon that touches on a multiplicity of economic, social and security aspects affecting our daily lives. In the Nordic countries' migration is a contentious political topic as the number of migrants has significantly increased in recent decades. The aim of this study is to analyse governmental policy documents on migrants in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden and to identify and compare how they are described within an empowerment perspective. A critical discourse analysis was undertaken of each Nordic country. The findings revealed that all four documents placed migrants in a passive position in regard to decision-making and that an empowerment perspective was lacking. Migrants are similarly treated in each Nordic country as a problem to deal with rather than as a possible resource for the society and the approach seeks to protect the welfare state and the culture of the country. The lack of empowerment perspective may be having a negative impact on the health and well-being of migrants and on their integration in the Nordic society. The article concludes by raising several questions in regard to migration and empowerment in the Nordic context., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press.)
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- 2021
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8. La promoción de la salud ¿es competente desde el punto de vista cultural para trabajar con migrantes?
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Laverack G
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- 2018
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9. La promotion de la santé est-elle culturellement compétente pour travailler avec les migrants ?
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Laverack G
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- 2018
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10. Is health promotion culturally competent to work with migrants?
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Laverack G
- Subjects
- Humans, Quality of Health Care, Transients and Migrants, Workforce, Cultural Competency organization & administration, Health Promotion, Volunteers education
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- 2018
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11. Psychological empowerment of NGO women in Iran: Designing a tool.
- Author
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Bakhshi F, Shojaeizadeh D, Sadeghi R, Nedjat S, Taghdisi MH, and Laverack G
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Background: As the core of health promotion, proper assessment of empowerment is a base for planning for a process that increases people's control on their decisions, lifestyle, and effective activities for their health., Objective: To design and develop a special tool to assess the empowerment of NGO women in Iran., Methods: This successive exploratory study of combinational type was conducted in 2015 in two steps. In the first step, using comments of participants and the help of authentic texts related to this field, dimensions of psychological empowerment were developed. In the second step, psychometric properties of the scale or tool were determined using formal content, and structural validity and reliability were determined using internal consistency and stability via SPSS version 21., Results: In the first step, the initial tool including 58 items was developed in the form of eight domains. In the second step, based on exploratory factor analysis (EFA), the number of items was reduced to 37. Considering the eigenvalues of higher than one, items were classified into eight factors. KMO index was 0.896 in this study. Reliability of the tool was 0.81 using Cronbach's alpha. This tool is able to predict 66.1% of total changes in psychological empowerment., Conclusion: A questionnaire with relevant reliability and validity, including eight domains of participation, motivation, cognitive thinking, critical thinking, self-efficacy, intention, perceived control and social support was developed to measure psychological empowerment of NGO women in Iran., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest: There is no conflict of interest to be declared.
- Published
- 2017
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12. Key experiences of community engagement and social mobilization in the Ebola response.
- Author
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Laverack G and Manoncourt E
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- Africa, Western epidemiology, Health Promotion methods, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola prevention & control, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola transmission, Humans, International Cooperation, Organizations, Public Health standards, United Nations, Anthropology, Cultural methods, Community Participation methods, Health Promotion organization & administration, Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola epidemiology, Public Health methods
- Abstract
The ongoing outbreak of the Ebola virus in West Africa is the largest on record; it has undermined already fragile healthcare systems and presented new challenges to contain the spread of the disease. Based on our observations in the field and insights from referenced sources, we aimed to identify key experiences of community engagement and social mobilization efforts in the current Ebola response. We concluded that there is no excuse not to actively involve local people and that the United Nations (UN) agencies and other partners did learn from their earlier mistakes to make a genuine attempt to better engage with communities. However, bottom-up approaches have not been widely implemented during the response and the reasons for not doing so must be further assessed. Health promotion can make an important contribution, because it shows how to enable people to take more control over their lives and health. This commentary can provide a guide to agencies to understand an appropriate way forward when the next Ebola outbreak inevitably occurs., (© The Author(s) 2015.)
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- 2016
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13. Health activism: the way forward to improve health in difficult times.
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Laverack G
- Subjects
- Economic Recession, Global Health, Health Promotion methods, Health Promotion standards, Humans, Politics, Power, Psychological, Quality Assurance, Health Care methods, Quality Assurance, Health Care standards, Health Promotion organization & administration, Healthcare Disparities economics, Patient Advocacy, Public Policy economics, Quality Assurance, Health Care organization & administration, Social Determinants of Health, Social Justice
- Abstract
Health activism is an action on behalf of a cause, action that goes beyond what is conventional or routine in society. It involves a challenge to the existing order whenever it is perceived to lead to a social injustice or inequality. Today social injustice is killing people on a grand scale and it is timely for health activism to be used as a way forward to improve health during difficult economic and political times. Health activism is essential because it can create the necessary conditions for people to take control over their own lives when others cannot or will not act on their behalf. Health promotion agencies and the practitioners that they employ, professional organisations and researchers can also play an important role. What is clear is that if greedy corporations and complacent governments are not challenged, we will continue to have limited success in improving health.
- Published
- 2013
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14. Activism and health in hard times.
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Laverack G
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- Australia, Humans, Politics, Social Change, Health Policy, Public Health trends, Social Determinants of Health trends, Social Justice trends
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- 2013
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15. What works and what does not: a discussion of popular approaches for the abandonment of female genital mutilation.
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Johansen RE, Diop NJ, Laverack G, and Leye E
- Abstract
The prevalence of Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) is reducing in almost all countries in which it is a traditional practice. There are huge variations between countries and communities though, ranging from no change at all to countries and communities where the practice has been more than halved from one generation to the next. Various interventions implemented over the last 30-40 years are believed to have been instrumental in stimulating this reduction, even though in most cases the decrease in prevalence has been slow. This raises questions about the efficacy of interventions to eliminate FGM and an urgent need to channel the limited resources available, where it can make the most difference in the abandonment of FGM. This paper is intended to contribute to the design of more effective interventions by assessing existing knowledge of what works and what does not and discusses some of the most common approaches that have been evaluated: health risk approaches, conversion of excisers, training of health professionals as change agents, alternative rituals, community-led approaches, public statements, and legal measures.
- Published
- 2013
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16. Health activism.
- Author
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Laverack G
- Subjects
- Health Status Disparities, Humans, Social Justice, Global Health, Health Policy, Politics
- Published
- 2012
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17. Where are the champions of global health promotion?
- Author
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Laverack G
- Subjects
- Leadership, World Health Organization, Health Promotion, Internationality
- Abstract
For many years the World Health Organization (WHO) has provided the global direction and leadership that has helped to shape the way we view health promotion today. The future role of the WHO is now uncertain and the lack of global leadership for health promotion and identification of who will provide the future direction are issues that need to be addressed. The crucial question posed in this commentary is: Where are the individuals and organisations that will provide the global leadership and vision for health promotion in the future? We need named champions for the future leadership of health promotion practice - people and organisations who offer a leadership style that will maintain its global profile, be representative across sectors and have the ability to maintain its political efficacy. The two key health promotion approaches, top-down and bottom-up, do not always share the same goals, and they demand different styles of leadership. This is an important consideration in our goal to find champions who can work with both approaches and understand how to accommodate them as a part of the future direction of health promotion. This commentary raises key questions to stimulate discussion and action towards addressing the lack of global leadership in health promotion. It discusses some of the key players, leadership characteristics and the contradictions in style that are inherent in achieving a goal of charismatic global champions.
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- 2012
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18. Parallel-tracking bottom-up approaches within chronic disease prevention programmes.
- Author
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Laverack G
- Subjects
- Models, Theoretical, New Zealand, Chronic Disease prevention & control, Health Promotion organization & administration
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- 2012
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19. What remains for the future: strengthening community actions to become an integral part of health promotion practice.
- Author
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Laverack G and Keshavarz Mohammadi N
- Subjects
- Financing, Organized, Health Promotion economics, Humans, Power, Psychological, Community Participation, Health Promotion organization & administration
- Abstract
To mark the 25th anniversary of the Ottawa Charter, this paper will discuss what remains to be achieved in strengthening community actions as an integral part of health promotion practice. To do this, the paper discusses four key elements for the future of health promotion programmes: (1) engage communities to share priorities; (2) build community capacity; (3) mechanisms for flexible and transparent funding; and (4) being creative in order to expand or replicate successful local initiatives. The paper uses a number of international case study examples of how these key elements can be achieved in health promotion programmes. A major challenge for the future is how health promotion agencies can develop and maintain the trust of communities, especially socially marginalized communities in society. The paper concludes by identifying a number of short and longer term challenges to achieve these goals and offers a way forward for a brighter future direction of health promotion practice.
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- 2011
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20. Editorial. Health promotion: Nairobi call for action.
- Author
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Laverack G
- Subjects
- Global Health, Health Education, Health Literacy, Humans, Health Promotion, Health Status Disparities, Social Marketing
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- 2010
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21. The sirens' song of empowerment: a case study of health promotion and the New Zealand Prostitutes Collective.
- Author
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Laverack G and Whipple A
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- Female, Health Promotion, Human Rights, Humans, New Zealand, Power, Psychological, Public Policy, Sex Work legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
The New Zealand Prostitutes Collective (NZPC) formed in 1987 with the intention of reforming the policy that governed prostitution. The Prostitution Reform Act 2003 was created to protect sex workers from exploitation and to give them the same rights as other workers by protecting their occupation health and safety. It is an example of community empowerment in which a small and relatively powerless group of women strived to achieve social justice and equity for all sex workers. This article provides, for the first time, the story of how the NZPC was not only able to decriminalize prostitution but also to form a framework that safeguarded the rights of all sex workers in New Zealand. It is a fascinating case study that provides insightful information into how one civil society group had a direct influence on public policy. The implications of the case study to health promotion practice are discussed and will be of interest to planners and practitioners involved in the strengthening of community empowerment.
- Published
- 2010
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22. [Measuring, evaluating and strategic development of community capacity and empowerment: introduction of a qualitative tool].
- Author
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Laverack G
- Subjects
- Australia, Communication, Community Networks, Physician-Patient Relations, Attitude to Health, Health Behavior, Health Promotion statistics & numerical data, Patient Participation statistics & numerical data, Personal Autonomy, Power, Psychological, Program Evaluation methods, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
This article addresses the questions of why some communities have more ability than others, why some communities are more capable at accessing resources, at influencing decision makers, are better organised and are better able at mobilising themselves towards empowerment. The difference in ability can be attributed to the level of knowledge, skills and competencies or capacity that a community has and which it can draw upon to address its concerns about the lives and health of its members. This article discusses a qualitative tool that has been extensively used in health promotion programmes to build community capacity and empowerment. The article defines the key concepts and unpacks capacity building into nine specific 'domains'. The article goes on to describe how the 'tool' can be implemented by practitioners to build and measure capacity and empowerment. The article provides an actual example from practice on the use of an innovative form of visual representation of the findings of the measurement.
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- 2008
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23. [Empowerment and health promotion programming].
- Author
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Laverack G
- Subjects
- Communication, Germany, Physician-Patient Relations, Attitude to Health, Concept Formation, Health Behavior, Health Promotion trends, Patient Participation trends, Personal Autonomy, Power, Psychological
- Abstract
Health promotion often presents a tension between "bottom up" and "top down" programming. "Bottom-up" is associated with community empowerment and begins on issues of concern to particular groups or individuals and regards an increase in overall control as an important element of the health outcome. "Top-down" is associated with disease prevention efforts and begins by seeking to involve beneficiaries on issues defined by health agencies. It regards improvements in health behaviours or bio-medical indicators as the important outcome and community empowerment is viewed simply as a means to the end of health behaviour change. The tension between these two approaches is not unresolvable, and this article presents a framework, the "parallel-track", intended to assist health promotion practitioners to systematically accommodate community empowerment goals within "top-down" health programming.
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- 2008
- Full Text
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24. Community participation: lessons for maternal, newborn, and child health.
- Author
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Rosato M, Laverack G, Grabman LH, Tripathy P, Nair N, Mwansambo C, Azad K, Morrison J, Bhutta Z, Perry H, Rifkin S, and Costello A
- Subjects
- Child Health Services trends, Child, Preschool, Community Health Workers trends, Community Participation statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Maternal Health Services trends, Primary Health Care trends, Rural Health Services trends, Women, Child Health Services organization & administration, Child Mortality trends, Community Health Workers organization & administration, Community Participation trends, Developing Countries, Maternal Health Services organization & administration, Maternal Mortality trends, Primary Health Care organization & administration, Rural Health Services organization & administration
- Abstract
Primary health care was ratified as the health policy of WHO member states in 1978.(1) Participation in health care was a key principle in the Alma-Ata Declaration. In developing countries, antenatal, delivery, and postnatal experiences for women usually take place in communities rather than health facilities. Strategies to improve maternal and child health should therefore involve the community as a complement to any facility-based component. The fourth article of the Declaration stated that, "people have the right and duty to participate individually and collectively in the planning and implementation of their health care", and the seventh article stated that primary health care "requires and promotes maximum community and individual self-reliance and participation in the planning, organization, operation and control of primary health care". But is community participation an essential prerequisite for better health outcomes or simply a useful but non-essential companion to the delivery of treatments and preventive health education? Might it be essential only as a transitional strategy: crucial for the poorest and most deprived populations but largely irrelevant once health care systems are established? Or is the failure to incorporate community participation into large-scale primary health care programmes a major reason for why we are failing to achieve Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) 4 and 5 for reduction of maternal and child mortality?
- Published
- 2008
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25. Building the capacity of Fijian communities to improve health outcomes.
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Laverack G
- Subjects
- Community Health Services standards, Fiji, Health Plan Implementation, Humans, Residence Characteristics, Treatment Outcome, Community Health Planning methods, Community Health Services organization & administration, Health Promotion organization & administration, Public Health
- Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to describe the experiences of building capacity toward improved health outcomes in a rural Fijian community. The paper defines the concept of community capacity situating this within the context of health programming. The tension that exists between the two key forms of health programming, top-down and bottom-up, is also discussed in terms of its resolution through the approach of 'parallel-tracking'. A practical means of visually representing the concept of community capacity is given using the spider-web configuration. The paper will be of interest to the planners and evaluators of health programmes that aim to build and measure community capacity.
- Published
- 2007
26. Improving health outcomes through community empowerment: a review of the literature.
- Author
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Laverack G
- Subjects
- Group Processes, Health Education, Health Promotion, Humans, Community Health Services, Community Participation, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Power, Psychological
- Abstract
This paper reviews the literature on how empowerment can lead to an improvement in the health status of an individual, group, or community. There is a broad body of literature on empowerment, and this review has been designed to identify material, particularly case studies, that can be included within the following 'empowerment domains': Participation; Community-based organizations; Local leadership; Resource mobilization; Asking 'why'; Assessment of problems; Links with other people and organizations; Role of outside agents; and Programme management. The paper discusses the results of the literature review and provides examples, from both developed and developing countries, of how each of the 'empowerment domains' has led to an improvement in health outcomes. The results of the review should be of interest to the planners and practitioners of health, population and nutrition programmes that have a particular focus on empowerment.
- Published
- 2006
27. Building capable communities: experiences in a rural Fijian context.
- Author
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Laverack G
- Subjects
- Fiji, Health Plan Implementation methods, Humans, Needs Assessment, Organizational Case Studies, Program Development methods, Public Health Administration, Community Health Planning methods, Community Participation, Health Promotion organization & administration, Rural Health Services organization & administration
- Abstract
This paper discusses the design of a methodology for 'building capable communities' in a health promotion programme context. The design of the methodology builds upon previous work and offers a new approach, through the use of nine 'operational domains', for the assessment and strategic planning of community empowerment. The purpose is to go beyond the rhetoric of participation and empowerment, and to provide a better understanding of how community empowerment goals can be made to be operational in a health promotion programme context. The experiences of implementing the methodology in two rural Fijian communities are discussed briefly. The common themes for the successful application of the methodology have been identified. The paper will be of interest to the planners and evaluators of health promotion programmes that aim to build community capacity and promote empowerment.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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28. Evaluating community capacity.
- Author
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Gibbon M, Labonte R, and Laverack G
- Subjects
- Decision Making, Organizational, Female, Fiji, Health Promotion statistics & numerical data, Humans, Male, Nepal, Rural Health Services statistics & numerical data, Social Responsibility, Community Health Planning organization & administration, Community Participation, Health Promotion organization & administration, Rural Health Services organization & administration
- Abstract
The aim of the present study was to examine the convergence of two approaches used to assess community capacity in health promotion interventions. One was used to examine women and men in rural communities in Fiji, and the other to study women only in rural communities in Nepal. Both approaches used a set of 'capacity domains', a ranking scale and a means of visually representing the findings. The experiences of using each approach, and the strengths and weaknesses of using rating scales and the 'capacity domains' to assess community capacity are discussed. The use of visual representations of community change, in particular the 'spider web' approach, are also discussed. The capacity building 'domains' presented in this study are robust and capture the essential qualities of a 'capable community'. 'Parallel tracking' of the domains allows programmes themselves to be viewed as a means to the end of building community capacity. These approaches provide a useful new dimension to programme evaluation.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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29. Community capacity building: a parallel track for health promotion programs.
- Author
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Labonte R, Woodard GB, Chad K, and Laverack G
- Subjects
- Canada, Community Participation, Humans, Community Health Planning organization & administration, Health Promotion organization & administration
- Published
- 2002
30. Measuring community empowerment: a fresh look at organizational domains.
- Author
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Laverack G and Wallerstein N
- Subjects
- Evaluation Studies as Topic, Humans, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care methods, Community Participation statistics & numerical data, Health Promotion organization & administration, Health Services Research methods, Power, Psychological
- Abstract
In 1986, the Ottawa Charter identified community empowerment as being a central theme of health promotion discourse. Community empowerment became a topical issue in the health promotion literature soon afterwards, though its roots also come from earlier literature in community psychology, community organizing and liberation education. Subsequent international conferences to address health promotion in Sundsvall, Adelaide and Jakarta have acted to reinforce this concept. It is as relevant today as it was more than a decade ago. The literature surrounding health promotion has since moved onto other overlapping theoretical perspectives, such as community capacity and social capital. And yet the critical issue of making community empowerment operational in a programme context remains thorny and elusive. Community empowerment is still difficult to measure and implement as a part of health promotion. This article offers a fresh look at key theoretical and practical questions in regard to the measurement of community empowerment. The theoretical questions help to unpack community empowerment in an attempt to clarify how the application of this concept can be best approached. The practical questions address the basic design characteristics for methodologies to measure community empowerment within the context of international health promotion programming. The purpose of this article is to allow researchers and practitioners to address again the important issue of making community empowerment operational.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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