Abstract

Cities are the predominant mode of living, and the growth in cities is related to the expansion of areas that have concentrated disadvantage. The foreseeable trend is for rising inequities across a wide range of social and health dimensions. Although qualitatively different, this trend exists in both the developed and developing worlds. Improving the health of people in slums will require new analytic frameworks. The social-determinants approach emphasizes the role of factors that operate at multiple levels, including global, national, municipal, and neighborhood levels, in shaping health. This approach suggests that improving living conditions in such arenas as housing, employment, education, equality, quality of living environment, social support, and health services is central to improving the health of urban populations. While social determinant and multilevel perspectives are not uniquely urban, they are transformed when viewed through the characteristics of cities such as size, density, diversity, and complexity. Ameliorating the immediate living conditions in the cities in which people live offers the greatest promise for reducing morbidity, mortality, and disparities in health and for improving quality of life and well being.

Keywords

DisadvantageSocial determinants of healthDiversity (politics)Health equityEconomic growthQuality of life (healthcare)GeographySocioeconomicsEnvironmental healthSociologyPolitical scienceHealth carePsychologyMedicineEconomics

MeSH Terms

Developing CountriesHealth StatusHumansUrban HealthUrbanization

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2007
Type
article
Volume
84
Issue
S1
Pages
16-26
Citations
454
Access
Closed

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454
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24
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Cite This

David Vlahov, Nicholas Freudenberg, Fernando Augusto Proietti et al. (2007). Urban as a Determinant of Health. Journal of Urban Health , 84 (S1) , 16-26. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11524-007-9169-3

Identifiers

DOI
10.1007/s11524-007-9169-3
PMID
17356903
PMCID
PMC1891649

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%