Affiliations 

  • 1 Urban Health Collaborative Dornsife School of Public Health Drexel University Philadelphia 19104 PA USA
  • 2 Instituto de Salud Colectiva Universidad Nacional de Lanús Buenos Aires Argentina
  • 3 School of Medicine Federal University of Minas Gerais Belo Horizonte Brazil
  • 4 School of Public Health University of Chile Santiago Chile
  • 5 Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean Santiago Chile
  • 6 School of Medicine Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia Lima Peru
  • 7 Department of City and Regional Planning The University of California Berkeley Berkeley 94704 CA USA
  • 8 Department of Public Health University of the Andes Bogota Colombia
  • 9 International Institute for Global Health United Nations University Kuala Lumpur Malaysia
  • 10 Department of Public Health Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile Santiago Chile
Glob Chall, 2019 Apr;3(4):1800013.
PMID: 31565372 DOI: 10.1002/gch2.201800013

Abstract

This article describes the origins and characteristics of an interdisciplinary multinational collaboration aimed at promoting and disseminating actionable evidence on the drivers of health in cities in Latin America and the Caribbean: The Network for Urban Health in Latin America and the Caribbean and the Wellcome Trust funded SALURBAL (Salud Urbana en América Latina, or Urban Health in Latin America) Project. Both initiatives have the goals of supporting urban policies that promote health and health equity in cities of the region while at the same time generating generalizable knowledge for urban areas across the globe. The processes, challenges, as well as the lessons learned to date in launching and implementing these collaborations, are described. By leveraging the unique features of the Latin American region (one of the most urbanized areas of the world with some of the most innovative urban policies), the aim is to produce generalizable knowledge about the links between urbanization, health, and environments and to identify effective ways to organize, design, and govern cities to improve health, reduce health inequalities, and maximize environmental sustainability in cities all over the world.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.