Intersectoral Planning for Public Health: Dilemmas and Challenges

Authors

  • Elisabeth Fosse Department of Health Promotion and Development, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway
  • Ellen Strøm Synnevåg Faculty of Social Sciences and History, Volda University College, Volda, Norway | Department of Health Promotion and Development, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway
  • Roar Amdam Faculty of Social Sciences and History, Volda University College, Volda, Norway
Abstract:

Background Intersectoral action is often presented as essential in the promotion of population health and health equity. In Norway, national public health policies are based on the Health in All Policies (HiAP) approach that promotes whole-of-government responsibility. As part of the promotion of this intersectoral responsibility, planning is presented as a tool that every Norwegian municipality should use to integrate public health policies into their planning and management systems. Although research on implementing the HiAP approach is increasing, few studies apply a planning perspective. To address this gap in the literature, our study investigates how three Norwegian municipalities experience the use of planning as a tool when implementing the HiAP approach.   Methods To investigate planning practices in three Norwegian municipalities, we used a qualitative multiple case study design based on face-to-face interviews. When analysing and discussing the results, we used the dichotomy of instrumental and communicative planning approaches, in addition to a collaborative planning approach, as the theoretical framework.   Results The municipalities encounter several dilemmas when using planning as a tool for implementing the HiAP approach. Balancing the use of qualitative and quantitative knowledge and balancing the use of structural and processual procedures are two such dilemmas. Other dilemmas include balancing the use of power and balancing action and understanding in different municipal contexts. They are also faced with the dilemma of whether to place public health issues at the forefront or to present these issues in more general terms.   Conclusion We argue that the dilemmas experienced by the municipalities might be explained by the difficult task of combining instrumental and communicative planning approaches because the balance between them is seldom fixed.

Download for Free

Sign up for free to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Ethical dilemmas in public health.

Correspondence Ethical dilemmas in public health SIR Public health officials, like physicians, should observe wherever possible the Hippocractic maxim-'Do no harm'. Because most public health measures are preventive, they would appear less likely to harm than the physician's diagnostic and curative interventions. But the history of three twentieth-century, public-health campaigns shows that pre...

full text

Health promotion research: dilemmas and challenges.

OBJECTIVE To analyse dilemmas and challenges in health promotion research, and to generate ideas for future development. METHOD The analysis is based on authors' experiences in working in the field of research and action in health promotion and on experiences of others as found in literature. RESULTS The assumptions underlying scientific research as based in the biomedical design are diffic...

full text

Confronting the challenges in reconnecting urban planning and public health.

Although public health and urban planning emerged with the common goal of preventing urban outbreaks of infectious disease, there is little overlap between the fields today. The separation of the fields has contributed to uncoordinated efforts to address the health of urban populations and a general failure to recognize the links between, for example, the built environment and health disparitie...

full text

Sarcopenia: burden and challenges for public health

Sarcopenia, operationally defined as the loss of muscle mass and muscle function, is a major health condition associated with ageing, and contributes to many components of public health at both the patient and the societal levels. Currently, no consensual definition of sarcopenia exists and therefore it is still a challenge to establish the actual prevalence of sarcopenia or to establish the di...

full text

Professionalization and public health: historical legacies, continuing dilemmas.

Professionalization in public health reflects wider institutional and political forces. Depending on the historical context in different countries, public health has developed as a medical specialty or as an independent field, entirely within the state or in mixed public-private institutions, closely or weakly tied to social movements, and in varying relations to fields such as engineering, nur...

full text

Urgent Challenges for Local Public Health Informatics

Good informatics improves public health. It enables public health agencies to be more responsive and productive. Improved accessibility to data can create more opportunities to improve health through partnerships, greater accountability, and improved efficiency. Informatics methods and approaches can address lack of timely data and enable quicker investigation of arising topics, from opioid abu...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

Save to my library Already added to my library

{@ msg_add @}


Journal title

volume 7  issue 11

pages  982- 992

publication date 2018-11-01

By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023