Vearey Jo, Luginaah Isaac, Magitta Ng'weina Francis, Shilla Dativa J, Oni Tolu
African Centre for Migration & Society, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Department of Geography, The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2019 Mar 25;19(1):340. doi: 10.1186/s12889-019-6674-8.
The African continent is predicted to be home to over half of the expected global population growth between 2015 and 2050, highlighting the importance of addressing population health in Africa for improving public health globally. By 2050, nearly 60% of the population of the continent is expected to be living in urban areas and 35-40% of children and adolescents globally are projected to be living in Africa. Urgent attention is therefore required to respond to this population growth - particularly in the context of an increasingly urban and young population. To this end, the Research Initiative for Cities Health and Equity in Africa (RICHE Africa) Network aims to support the development of evidence to inform policy and programming to improve urban health across the continent. This paper highlights the importance of action in the African continent for achieving global public health targets. Specifically, we argue that a focus on urban health in Africa is urgently required in order to support progress on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and other global and regional public health targets, including Universal Health Coverage (UHC), the new Urban Agenda, and the African Union's Agenda 2063. Action on urban public health in Africa is critical for achieving global public health targets. Four key research and training priorities for improving urban health in Africa, are outlined: (1) increase intersectoral urban health literacy; (2) apply a healthy urban governance and systems approach; (3) develop a participatory and collaborative urban health planning process; and, (4) produce a new generation of urban health scholars and practitioners. We argue that acting on key priorities in urban health is critical for improving health for all and ensuring that we 'leave no-one behind' when working to achieve these regional and global agendas to improve health and wellbeing.
预计2015年至2050年期间,全球一半以上的人口增长将出现在非洲大陆,这凸显了关注非洲人口健康对改善全球公共卫生的重要性。到2050年,预计非洲大陆近60%的人口将居住在城市地区,全球35%-40%的儿童和青少年预计将生活在非洲。因此,迫切需要关注这一人口增长——尤其是在人口日益城市化和年轻化的背景下。为此,非洲城市健康与公平研究倡议(RICHE Africa)网络旨在支持开展相关研究,为政策制定和项目规划提供依据,以改善非洲大陆的城市健康状况。本文强调了非洲大陆采取行动对于实现全球公共卫生目标的重要性。具体而言,我们认为迫切需要关注非洲的城市健康,以推动可持续发展目标(SDGs)以及其他全球和区域公共卫生目标的进展,这些目标包括全民健康覆盖(UHC)、新的《城市议程》以及非洲联盟的《2063年议程》。非洲城市公共卫生行动对于实现全球公共卫生目标至关重要。本文概述了改善非洲城市健康的四个关键研究和培训重点:(1)提高城市部门间的健康素养;(2)应用健康的城市治理和系统方法;(3)开展参与性和协作性的城市健康规划过程;(4)培养新一代城市健康学者和从业者。我们认为,针对城市健康的关键重点采取行动对于改善所有人的健康状况以及确保在努力实现这些区域和全球议程以增进健康和福祉时“不让任何人掉队”至关重要。