Home > June 26: Webinar on Intervention in Health Promotion Practice / Webinaire à propos les interventions dans le domaine de la promotion de la santé
June 26: Webinar on Intervention in Health Promotion Practice / Webinaire à propos les interventions dans le domaine de la promotion de la santé
Jun 13, 2018
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By CS Team
Webinar: Contrasting entry points for intervention in health promotion practice
The NCCDH and Health Promotion Canada (HPC) are collaborating on a series of webinars to highlight several chapters of the newly released book Health Promotion in Canada 4th edition: New Perspectives on Theory, Practice, Policy, and Research. The goal is to explore how various themes in this book apply to public health action on health equity by pairing the authors’ content with practitioner perspective on application to public health practice.
This webinar will take place in English.
Health promotion practice has traditionally consisted of three main entry points, which are issues/risk factors, population groups and settings. When planning interventions to address the social determinants of health (SDH) and health equity, the impact of the social context on the effectiveness of these three entry points is often dismissed, as is the importance of the social context itself. This occurs despite the fact that individuals and communities do not work in isolation from one another.
This webinar will explore the three main entry points, as well as the impact of social context on health promotion interventions. The presenters will share practice-based examples that address this topic in relation to public health planning and policy development in the pursuit of health equity.
Participants will learn about:
the advantages and disadvantages to the points of intervention discussed;
the concept of ‘collective lifestyles’ as a mechanism of the social structure within which health is determined; and
the application of health promotion intervention points and social context to public health action for health equity.
Speaker:
Dr. Martine Shareck Banting Postdoctoral Fellow, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto
Le CCNDS et Promotion de la santé Canada présentent ensemble une série de webinaires sur plusieurs des chapitres du récent livre Health Promotion in Canada 4th edition: New Perspectives on Theory, Practice, Policy, and Research (en anglais). Ils veulent ainsi explorer la mesure dans laquelle les thèmes du livre s’appliquent à l’action menée en santé publique pour favoriser l’équité en santé. Le webinaire permettra ainsi d’examiner les liens entre le contenu du livre et la perspective des praticiens quant à son application en santé publique.
Le webinaire se déroulera en français.
Le domaine de la promotion de la santé comportait traditionnellement trois grands points d’entrée, soit les problèmes et les facteurs de risque, les groupes de population et les milieux de vie. Au moment de planifier des interventions sur les déterminants sociaux de la santé et l’équité en santé, on ne tient pas souvent compte de l’influence du contexte social sur l’efficacité de ces trois points d’entrée tout comme l’importance du contexte social comme tel. Cela se passe malgré le fait que les individus et les collectivités ne travaillent pas en vase clos.
Le webinaire permettra d’explorer les trois grands points d’entrée, de même que l’influence du contexte social sur les interventions dans le domaine de la promotion de la santé. Les présentatrices donneront des exemples concrets se rapportant au sujet en établissant un lien avec les processus de planification et d’élaboration des politiques suivis en santé publique pour tendre vers l’équité en santé.
Les personnes participantes pourront apprendre
les avantages et les désavantages des points d’entrée mentionnés par rapport aux interventions;
le concept de « modes de vie collectifs » comme mécanisme de structure sociale au sein de laquelle se détermine la santé;
l’application des points d’entrée dans le domaine de la promotion de la santé et du contexte social à l’action menée en santé publique pour favoriser l’équité en santé.
Conférencière:
Martine Shareck, Ph. D. Boursière de recherches postdoctorales Banting, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, Université de Toronto
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