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Planetary health indicators for the local level: opportunities and challenges in applying the happy planet index in Victoria, Australia

Patrick, Rebecca, Henderson-Wilson, Claire, Lawson, Justin, Capetola, Teresa, Shaw, A, Davison, M and Freeman, A 2021, Planetary health indicators for the local level: opportunities and challenges in applying the happy planet index in Victoria, Australia, Global Health Promotion, pp. 1-10, doi: 10.1177/17579759211038367.

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Title Planetary health indicators for the local level: opportunities and challenges in applying the happy planet index in Victoria, Australia
Author(s) Patrick, RebeccaORCID iD for Patrick, Rebecca orcid.org/0000-0002-5537-243X
Henderson-Wilson, ClaireORCID iD for Henderson-Wilson, Claire orcid.org/0000-0001-7826-9788
Lawson, JustinORCID iD for Lawson, Justin orcid.org/0000-0002-5934-8752
Capetola, TeresaORCID iD for Capetola, Teresa orcid.org/0000-0002-9913-5452
Shaw, A
Davison, M
Freeman, A
Journal name Global Health Promotion
Article ID ARTN 17579759211038367
Start page 1
End page 10
Total pages 10
Publisher SAGE
Place of publication London, Eng.
Publication date 2021
ISSN 1757-9759
1757-9767
Keyword(s) ECOSYSTEMS
environment
Happy Planet Index
indicators
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
planetary health
POPULATION HEALTH
PROMOTION
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
Science & Technology
wellbeing
Summary The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, New Urban Agenda and Paris Agreement on Climate Change are blueprints for health promotion action that mandate human health is linked inextricably to the health of the environment. In the Anthropocene, new indicators are required to promote community engagement with, and measurement of, healthy and sustainable wellbeing for people and planet. This study explored the need for a metric such as the Happy Planet Index that explicitly links human health to health of the environment for a local level scale in Australia. The project arose from an international coalition of health promoters advocating for ‘planetary health’ approaches. Qualitative description methods guided the study design involving key informant interviews ( n = 17) and four focus groups ( n = 27 participants) with health and/or sustainability academics, practitioners and policy-makers. Document analysis of health and environment indices and policy mandates augmented the analysis. Qualitative content analysis techniques were used to analyse the findings. There was strong interest for a local level composite indicator, such as a rescaled Happy Planet Index (life expectancy × life satisfaction × equity adjustment/ecological footprint) for use at a local level. The value of a composite index was: its ability to promote community engagement with planetary health thinking; an advocacy tool for joint health and sustainability policy; to justify programs on health and environmental co-benefits; and to provide a mechanism for correlative comparisons between local governments and national comparisons. However, disciplinary silos currently limit partnerships for health promotion and planetary health and a local composite index could help bridge these divides.
Language eng
DOI 10.1177/17579759211038367
Field of Research 1117 Public Health and Health Services
HERDC Research category C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Persistent URL http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30155317

Document type: Journal Article
Collections: Faculty of Health
School of Health and Social Development
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