A model curriculum for a course on the built environment and public health: training for an interdisciplinary workforce

Despite growing evidence of the direct and indirect effects of the built environment on public health, planners, who shape the built environment, and public health professionals, who protect the public's health, rarely interact. Most public health professionals have little experience with urban...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of preventive medicine 2009-02, Vol.36 (2 Suppl), p.S63-S71
Hauptverfasser: Botchwey, Nisha D, Hobson, Susan E, Dannenberg, Andrew L, Mumford, Karen G, Contant, Cheryl K, McMillan, Tracy E, Jackson, Richard J, Lopez, Russell, Winkle, Curtis
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container_end_page S71
container_issue 2 Suppl
container_start_page S63
container_title American journal of preventive medicine
container_volume 36
creator Botchwey, Nisha D
Hobson, Susan E
Dannenberg, Andrew L
Mumford, Karen G
Contant, Cheryl K
McMillan, Tracy E
Jackson, Richard J
Lopez, Russell
Winkle, Curtis
description Despite growing evidence of the direct and indirect effects of the built environment on public health, planners, who shape the built environment, and public health professionals, who protect the public's health, rarely interact. Most public health professionals have little experience with urban planners, zoning boards, city councils, and others who make decisions about the built environment. Likewise, few planners understand the health implications of design, land use, or transportation decisions. One strategy for bridging this divide is the development of interdisciplinary courses in planning and public health that address the health implications of the built environment. Professional networking and Internet-based searches in 2007 led to the identification of six primarily graduate-level courses in the U.S. that address the links between the built environment and public health. Common content areas in most of the identified courses included planning and public health histories, health disparities, interdisciplinary approaches, air and water quality, physical activity, social capital, and mental health. Instructors of these courses collaborated on course content, assignments, and evaluations to develop a model curriculum that follows an active learning-centered approach to course design. The proposed model curriculum is adaptable by both planning and public health departments to promote interdisciplinary learning. Results show that students gain planning and public health perspectives through this instruction, benefiting from active-learning opportunities. Faculty implementation of the proposed interdisciplinary model curriculum will help bridge the divide between the built environment and public health and enable both planners and public health professionals to value, create, and promote healthy environments.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Built environment
City Planning - education
Curriculum
Environment Design
Health Promotion - methods
Humans
Interdisciplinary approach
Interprofessional Relations
Models, Educational
Physical activity
Public health
Public Health - education
Staff Development
United States
Urban planning
Walking
title A model curriculum for a course on the built environment and public health: training for an interdisciplinary workforce
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