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Do healthy cities work? A logic of method for assessing impact and outcome of healthy cities

journal contribution
posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00 authored by Evelyne de Leeuw
In this article, we discuss an appropriate methodology for assessing complex urban programs such as the WHO European Healthy Cities Network. The basic tenets and parameters for this project are reviewed, and situated in the broader urban health tradition. This leads to a delineation of the types of questions researchers can address when looking at a complex urban health program. Such questions reach appropriately beyond traditional public health concepts involving proximal and distal determinants of health (and associated upstream, midstream, and downstream rhetoric). Espousing a multi-level, reciprocal pathways perspective on Healthy Cities research, we also adopt a distinction between impacts and outcomes of Healthy Cities. The former are value driven, the latter intervention-driven. These approaches lead to the acknowledgment of a logic of method that includes situational and contextual appreciation of unique Healthy City experiences in a Realist Evaluation paradigm. The article concludes with a reflection of evaluation and assessment procedures applied to Phase IV (2003-2008) of the WHO European Healthy Cities Network and an interpretation of response rates to the range of methods that have been adopted.

History

Journal

Journal of urban health

Volume

89

Issue

2

Pagination

217 - 231

Publisher

Springer New York LLC

Location

New York, N. Y.

ISSN

1099-3460

eISSN

1468-2869

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, The New York Academy of Medicine

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