Environnement, Risques & Santé
MENUCrafting health promotion: from Ottawa to beyond Shanghai Volume 15, numéro 6, Novembre-Décembre 2016
Illustrations
1 MSc MPH PhD
Director of the Centre for Health Equity Training Research & Evaluation (CHETRE)
UNSW Australia Research Centre for Primary Health Care & Equity
Unit of Population Health
South Western Sydney Local Health District
NSW Health and member of the Ingham Institute
Australia
Director of the Centre for Health Equity Training Research & Evaluation (CHETRE)
UNSW Australia Research Centre for Primary Health Care & Equity
Unit of Population Health
South Western Sydney Local Health District
NSW Health and member of the Ingham Institute
Australia
2 BSW MPASR PhD
Deputy Director of the Centre for Health Equity Training
Research & Evaluation (CHETRE)
UNSW Australia Research Centre for Primary Health Care & Equity
Unit of Population Health
South Western Sydney Local Health District
NSW Health and member of the Ingham Institute
Australia
Deputy Director of the Centre for Health Equity Training
Research & Evaluation (CHETRE)
UNSW Australia Research Centre for Primary Health Care & Equity
Unit of Population Health
South Western Sydney Local Health District
NSW Health and member of the Ingham Institute
Australia
* Reprints
a Evelyne de Leeuw attended the International conference on health promotion in Ottawa (November 1986) and all subsequent Global Conferences on Health Promotion. She may not be in Shanghai.
- DOI : 10.1684/ers.2016.0921
- Page(s) : 461-4
- Année de parution : 2016
Impact and changeThis year there are celebrations, around the world, of the 30th anniversary of the Ottawa Charter [1]. We have seen similar celebrations five years [2, 3] and ten years ago [4, 5]. The Charter remains visionary and inspirational, with a lasting legacy. But it has not delivered on its vision comprehensively. Two of its action areas stand out as having failed to show real evidence of success: the call to build healthy public policy, and the need to reorient health services for health [...]