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Creating healthy cities

"Health is created and lived by people within the settings of their everyday life; where they learn, work, play, and love." - The Ottawa Charter, 1986.

This statement is at the heart of the Healthy Settings approach, which has its roots in the WHO Health for All strategy and, more specifically, the Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion.

The Healthy Cities programme is the best-known example of a successful Healthy Settings approach. Initiated by WHO in 1986, Healthy Cities have spread rapidly across the world.

A Healthy City aims to:

  • create a health-supportive environment,
  • achieve a good quality of life,
  • provide basic sanitation and hygiene needs,
  • supply access to health care.

Being a Healthy City depends not only on health infrastructures, but also on a commitment to improve a city's environs and a willingness to forge the necessary connections in political, economic, and social arenas.

70%

of people

will live in cities by 2050

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12%

of cities globally

reach pollution control targets

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Publications

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Urban governance for health and well-being:  A step-by-step approach to operational research in cities

Building on good practices in the WHO Healthy Cities programme, this step-by-step approach and the indicators developed allow for the establishment of...

Good urban governance for health and well-being: A systematic review of barriers, facilitators and indicators

The aim of the systematic review was to identify barriers to and facilitators of multisectoral action and civic engagement and to suggest validated indicators...

Healthy Cities Effective Approach to a Changing World

The Healthy Cities initiative was conceived with the goal of placing health high on the social and political agenda of cities by promoting health, equity...

 The outcome of the 9th Global Conference on Health Promotion (Shanghai, 21 to 24 November 2016), which is jointly organized by the Government of...

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