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E-raamat: Handbook of Global Urban Health

Edited by (Michigan State University), Edited by , Edited by (University of Otago), Edited by (The Bartlett Development Planning Unit (DPU), University College London (UCL)), Edited by (Columbia University, Mailman School of Public Health)
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Through interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary perspectives, and with an emphasis on exploring patterns as well as distinct and unique conditions across the globe, this collection examines advanced and cutting-edge theoretical and methodological approaches to the study of the health of urban populations. Despite the growing interest in global urban health, there are limited resources available that provide an extensive and advanced exploration into the health of urban populations in a transnational context.

This volume offers a high-quality and comprehensive examination of global urban health issues by leading urban health scholars from around the world. The book brings together a multi-disciplinary perspective on urban health, with chapter contributions emphasizing disciplines in the social sciences, construction sciences and medical sciences. The co-editors of the collection come from a number of different disciplinary backgrounds that have been at the forefront of urban health research, including public health, epidemiology, geography, city planning and urban design.

The book is intended to be a reference in global urban health for research libraries and faculty collections. It will also be appropriate as a text for university class adoption in upper-division under-graduate courses and above. The proposed volume is extensive and offers enough breadth and depth that it can be used for courses emphasizing a U.S., or wider Western perspective, as well as courses on urban health emphasizing a global context.

Arvustused

"This handbook will make a significant contribution to the public health literature; it stitches together the writings of leading researchers from multiple disciplines that make up the interdisciplinary field of global urban health in a very readable and easy to follow manner."

Ayaz Hyder, review in Journal of Urban Affairs

Acknowledgments xiv
Part 1 Urban Health: An Introduction and Overview 1(114)
1 Global Urban Health: Inequalities, Vulnerabilities, and Challenges in the 21st Century
3(30)
Igor Vojnovic
Amber L. Pearson
Gershim Asiki
Geoffrey DeVerteuil
Adriana Allen
2 Urban Health in the US and UK: The Long 19th Century
33(35)
Susan Craddock
Tim Brown
3 Sin in the City: An Urban History of Medicine and Modern Morality in Turkey
68(17)
Emine O. Evered
Kyle T. Evered
4 Healthcare and the City: A North American Perspective
85(12)
Mark W. Rosenberg
5 Delivering Urban Health through Urban Planning and Design
97(18)
Laurence Carmichael
Part 2 Healthcare Policy and Urban Health Services 115(100)
6 Cities, Immigration, and the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
119(15)
Michael K. Gusmano
7 Voluntary Sector and Urban Health Systems
134(15)
Andrew Power
Mark Skinner
8 Urban Policies and Health in Latin America and the Caribbean
149(18)
S. Claire Slesinski
Adriana C. Lein
Ana V. Diez Roux
Waleska T. Caiaffa
9 Access to Healthcare for the Urban Poor in Nairobi, Kenya: Harnessing the Role of the Private Sector in Informal Settlements and a Human Rights-Based Approach to Health Policy
167(15)
Pauline Bakibinga
Elizabeth Bakibinga-Gaswaga
10 Medical Travel/Tourism and the City
182(19)
Meghann Ormond
Heidi Kaspar
11 The Health System and Immigrants: A Focus on Urban France
201(14)
Anne-Cecile Hoyez
Celine Bergeon
Clelia Gasquet-Blanchard
Part 3 Mental Health and Wellbeing: An Urban Context 215(100)
12 Urban Mental Health
217(15)
James Lowe
13 Children's Resilience and Mental Health in the Urban Context
232(21)
Maureen Mooney
14 Welfare Facilities and Happiness of the Elderly in Urban Korea
253(16)
Danya Kim
Jangik Jin
15 Public Space and Pedestrian Stress Perception: Insights from Darmstadt, Germany
269(14)
Martin Knoll
Marianne Halblaub Miranda
Thomas Cleff
Annette Rudolph-Cleff
16 Cities and Indigenous Communities: The Health and Wellbeing of Urban Maori in Aotearoa New Zealand
283(14)
John Ryks
Naomi Simmonds
Jesse Whitehead
17 Landscape Restructuring in the Shrinking City and Implications for Mental Health
297(18)
Jared Olson
Lora Daskalska
Kelly Hoormann
Kirsten Beyer
Part 4 Vulnerable Urban Populations 315(112)
18 Challenges to Public Health in the Favelas of Metropolitan Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
319(28)
Robert E. Snyder
Kathryn L. Lovero
Claudete A.A. Cardoso
Lee W. Riley
Alon Unger
19 Taking Action to Improve Indigenous Health in the Cities of Quebec and Elsewhere in Canada: The Example of the Minowe Clinic at the Val-d'Or Native Friendship Centre
347(16)
Carole Levesque
Edith Cloutier
Ioana Radu
Dominique Parent-Manseau
Stephane Laroche
Natasha Blanchet-Cohe
20 Refugees and Health: A European Urban Context
363(20)
Gordana Rabrenovic
Danijela V. Spasic
Tibrine da Fonseca
21 Refugees and Health in Urban Africa
383(11)
Sheru Wanyua Muuo
22 The Urban Hierarchy and Spatial Relationships between Poverty and Cancer: Does Location Error Matter?
394(17)
Monghyeon Lee
Yongwan Chun
Daniel A. Griffith
23 African Cities and Ebola
411(16)
Zacchaeus Anywaine
Ggayi Abubaker Mustapher
Part 5 Violence and Injuries 427(102)
24 Pedestrian Injuries in Cities: A Global Perspective
431(17)
Marie-Soleil Cloutier
Andrew Howard
25 Alcohol Availability and Crime in Post-Disaster Christchurch, New Zealand: Implications for Health in Cities
448(15)
Gregory D. Breetzke
Amber L. Pearson
26 Urban Gun Violence
463(21)
Janice A. Iwama
Jack McDevitt
27 European Street Gangs and Urban Violence
484(25)
Keir Irwin-Rogers
Scott Decker
Amir Rostami
Svetlana Stephenson
Elke Van Hellemont
28 Neighbourhood Recovery and Community Wellbeing in Cities Following Natural Disasters: Findings from Christchurch, New Zealand
509(20)
Vivienne Ivory
Chris Bowie
Clare Robertson
Amber L. Pearson
Part 6 Pollutants, Environmental Contamination and Urban Health 529(110)
29 Urban Slums, Drinking Water, and Health: Trends and Lessons from Sub-Saharan Africa
533(20)
Ellis Adjei Adams
Heather Price
Justin Stoler
30 A Greening but Unequal City: Environmental Exposure Disparities, Gentrified Inequities, and Public Health in Seattle, Washington
553(31)
Jonah White
Troy Abel
31 Fighting for Urban Environmental Health Justice in Southside (Los Sures) Williamsburg, Brooklyn: A Community-Engaged Pilot Study
584(30)
Ivan J. Ramirez
Ana Baptista
Jieun Lee
Ana Traverso-Krejcarek
Andreah Santos
32 Ambient Air Pollution and Health Effects in Shanghai: Trend, Challenges, and Opportunities
614(25)
Wei Tu
Zhijing Lin
Lili Du
Haidong Kan
Weichun Ma
Part 7 Public Health and the Role of the Built Environment 639(156)
33 Transport, Urban Regeneration and Health
643(19)
Julie Clark
Angela Curl
34 Rice, Men, and Other Everyday Anxieties: Navigating Obesogenic Urban Food Environments in Osaka, Japan
662(20)
Cindi Sturtz Sreetharan
Alexandra Brewis
35 The Built Environment, Physical Activity, and Obesity: Exploring Burdens on Vulnerable U.S. Populations
682(36)
Igor Vojnovic
Zeenat Kotval-K
Jieun Lee
Jeanette Eckert
Jiang Chang
Wei Liu
Xiaomeng Li
Arika Ligmann-Zielinska
36 Public Health Challenges with Sub-Saharan African Informal Settlements: A Case Study of Malaria in Yaounde
718(13)
Roland Ngom
37 Health-Oriented Urban Planning in Germany: Urban Planning and Design Approaches Going beyond Professional Boundaries
731(22)
Angela Million
Andrea Rudiger
38 Flint, Michigan's Food Crisis: Retail Abandonment, Social and Economic Burdens, and Local Food-Oriented Solutions
753(16)
Richard C. Sadler
39 Housing and Urban Health: A Los Angeles Study
769(26)
Edith Huarita
Victoria Basolo
Notes on Contributors 795(17)
Index 812
Igor Vojnovic is Professor and Interim Director of the Global Urban Studies Program at Michigan State University. His main area of research focuses on urban (re)development processes and the study of resulting socio-economic, physical, environmental and health impacts. He holds appointments in the Department of Geography, Environment and Spatial Sciences, the School of Planning, Design, and Construction and the Global Urban Studies Program. He is also the Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Urban Affairs.

Amber L. Pearson is an Assistant Professor at Michigan State University in the Department of Geography, Environment and Spatial Sciences and an Honorary Fellow at the University of Otago, Department of Public Health. She is a health geographer with a focus on social justice. She employs spatial and epidemiological methods to understand processes that lead to or exacerbate health inequalities globally. In her research she aims to explore aspects of the built, physical and social environment which can bolster equitable health.

Gershim Asiki is a medical doctor with a PhD in Epidemiology, and an Associate Research Scientist at the African Population and Health Research Center (APHRC) in Nairobi, Kenya. His research focuses on generating evidence to drive stronger and more resilient systems for improved health of vulnerable populations. He has worked as a frontline physician (20012005) in a district hospital in Uganda, as a research scientist at the British Medical Research Council Unit in Uganda (20082015) and as a Technical Advisor with Columbia University (ICAP project) in Uganda, Cameroon and Namibia (20152017) leading country-wide population based HIV impact assessments. He currently leads research on chronic diseases, testing models for strengthening health systems' response to epidemiological trends of non-communicable diseases to influence policy and transform lives of vulnerable populations across Africa.

Geoffrey DeVerteuil is a Senior Lecturer of social geography, urban geography and health geography at the School of Geography and Planning at Cardiff University. His work focuses on the geographies of social problems in citieshomelessness, mental health, substance abuseas well responses to them, in terms of concepts such as poverty management, service hubs and social/spatial resilience. His recent work underlines the important role of the voluntary sector in both managing extreme poverty and creating particular perspectives on what it means to help the vulnerable.

Adriana Allen is Professor of Development Planning and Urban Sustainability at the Development Planning Unit (DPU), University College London (UCL), where she is actively engaged in various initiatives promoting trans-local learning and enhanced research capacity, both within UCL and internationally.She has over 30 years' research experience in over 20 countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America. Adopting a political ecology perspective, her work focuses on investigating the scope for transformative links between socio-environmental change, justice and sustainability in urban and peri-urban contexts.