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Towards equity-focused intersectoral practice (EquIP) in children's environmental health and housing: the transformational story of RentSafe.

Authors :
Phipps E
Masuda JR
Source :
Canadian journal of public health = Revue canadienne de sante publique [Can J Public Health] 2018 Jun; Vol. 109 (3), pp. 379-385. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Jun 15.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Setting: This paper chronicles the transformational process through which a national intersectoral collaboration, the Canadian Partnership for Children's Health and Environment (CPCHE), came to embrace a more upstream, equity-based focus in its mandate to advance children's environmental health.<br />Intervention: After 15 years of working within a conventional, evidence-informed approach to health promotion and policy advocacy, in 2010-2013, CPCHE had the opportunity to collaborate on the development of equity-focused knowledge translation (EqKT). EqKT is a relational approach to knowledge practices that challenges intersectoral actors to work to uncover biases and limitations within their own institutional paradigms and professional practices that constrain their capacity to address population health inequities.<br />Outcome: The ensuing transformation towards equity-focused intersectoral practice led CPCHE to create an intersectoral initiative called RentSafe. Conceptually and operationally, RentSafe provides an intersectoral space within which the grounded expertise of people with experience of unhealthy and undignified housing provides a roadmap for public health and other practitioners to critically explore professional and institutional blind spots and barriers. With RentSafe as its watershed moment, CPCHE is shifting from a top-down "for whom" orientation to an authentically engaged "with whom" approach that seeks to work integrally with community partners to expose and challenge systemic roots of health inequity.<br />Implications: The transformational story of CPCHE underscores the competencies needed for public health professionals to acknowledge the sources of our own biases and limitations as a necessary first step in equity-focused intersectoral practice (EquIP). It also affirms the value of working in partnership with those who experience the environmental health inequities that such efforts seek to address.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1920-7476
Volume :
109
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Canadian journal of public health = Revue canadienne de sante publique
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29981107
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17269/s41997-018-0094-x