These documents and links are provided for your interest and background reading. Inclusion on this site does not imply endorsement of them by the Public Health Agency of Canada.
Some of the following documents are not currently available electronically.
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Reducing Health Disparities -- Roles of the Health Sector: Discussion Paper (December 2004)
Reducing Health Disparities -- Roles of the Health Sector: Recommended Policy Directions and Activities (December 2004)
Canadians are among the healthiest people in the world, but major health disparities exist; the most important relate to socio-economic status (SES), aboriginal identity, gender and geographic location.
Two reports from the former Federal, Provincial and Territorial Advisory Committee on Population Health and Health Security (ACPHHS) provide important tools to engage decision-makers and researchers in an informed discussion about health disparities in Canada and options for addressing them.
Reducing
Health Inequalities: Implications for Interventions (2000)
Describes upstream and downstream policies. Be sure to look at Appendix
A, a helpful schematic of the drivers of population health.
Reducing Inequalities in Health:
Proposals for Health Promotion Policy and Action (2000)
Ten points are put forward to provide an approach through which inequalities
in health can be reduced.
Report
on Plans and Priorities (RPP) (2001)
The RPP (Part-lll) are individual expenditure plans for each federal department
and agency, except Crown corporations.
Report
on the Health of Canadians (1996)
Is intended to serve as a tool to help policy makers, health workers, and the
public measure Canada's progress in achieving better overall population health. Also see: Toward
A Healthy Future: Second Report on the Health of Canadians
Report
of the Roundtable on Population Health and Health Promotion (1996)
Summarizes the key elements, noting areas of agreement and disagreement, and
highlighting recommendations for follow-up developed by the participants.
Setting the stage for health impact assessment.
By P. Ratner, L. Green, J. Frankish, T. Chomik, & C. Larsen, Journal of Public
Health Policy, 18(1), 67-79. (1997)
Shifting Discourses on Health in Canada: From Health Promotion to Population
Health.
Robertson, A. Health Promotion International,
13, 155-166. (1998).
Social
Capital: Literature Review (2001)
This report reviews the literature on social capital focusing on issues of
definition, measurement, and policy implications.
Social
Capital as a Health Determinant: How is it Defined? Working Paper Series,
Health Canada, 2002 (2003)
This report is a summary of social capital research and attempts to clarify
the place of social capital among the social determinants of health. The companion
report, Social
Capital as a Health Determinant How is it Measured? focusses on the methodological
aspects of social capital research.
Social Investment in New Brunswick, Atlantic Case Studies (2000)
Shows how government, communities and the privates sector must work together
to ensure that all people are included.
Social Determinants of Health
By Micheal Marmot and Richard G. Wilkinson, Oxford U.P. (1999)
This book shows that health is not just about individual behavior or exposure
to risk, but that a population's social and economic structure shapes its health.
The Social Determinants of Health: An Overview of the Implications for Policy and the Role of the Health Sector
Social Determinants of Health:
The Solid Facts (2003)
This second edition identifies evidence of social determinants of health to promote
debate and action.
Social
Disparities and Involvement in Physical Activity: Shaping the Policy Agenda
in Healthy Living to Successfully Influence Population Health
by Lise
Gauvin, Ph.D.,GRIS (Groupe de recherche interdisciplinaire en santé -
Interdisciplinary Research Group on Health), Université de Montréal
The Socioeconomic
Gradient in Population Health: Explaining Health Inequalities (2000)
Explains key concepts with respect to the core dynamics of population health,
the socioeconomic gradient, and biological mechanisms occurring in early childhood.
Strategies
for Population Health - Investing in the Health of Canadians (1994)
Identifies broad population health strategies on which the provincial, territorial
and federal governments could collaborate and achieve significant results.
Taking
Action On Population Health (1998)
Provides Health Canada employees with an understanding of what the approach
means to their work, offers a review of its evolution and links to health promotion.
Toward a Healthy
Future: Second Report on the Health of Canadians (1999)
Provides a picture of the most current information we have on the health of
Canadians, and on the factors that influence our health.
Towards a
Common Understanding: Clarifying Core Concepts of Population Health - A Discussion
Paper (1996)
Promotes a common understanding of population health and describes how a population
health approach will guide future program and policy development within Health
Canada.
Towards a New Concept
of Health: Three Discussion Papers (2000)
Presents a hypothesis for the "health gradient" - that shows people's health
status closely parallels their socio-economic status, regardless of the quality
of the health care system available to them.
Towards a New Perspective
on Health Policy (2001)
Provides a rare comprehensive overview of health and health policy in
Canada.
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