SDGs and public health policies: implementing the S2D grid in the city of Lausanne, Switzerland

Author:

Forbat Julien1ORCID,Roué Le Gall Anne23,Porcherie Marion23ORCID,Gosset Christiane24,Bantuelle Martine2,Marchandise Charlotte2,Thébault Pascal2,Latrèche Souhail2,Bédat Alexandre2,Simos Jean12

Affiliation:

1. University of Geneva, Institute of Global Health, Geneve, Switzerland

2. S2D, Association Internationale pour la Santé et le Développement Durable (International Association for Health and Sustainable Development), Rennes, France

3. EHESP School of Public Health, Rennes, France

4. University of Liège, Faculty of Medicine, Liège, Belgium

Abstract

Sustainable development goals (SDGs) and public health are often considered as separate policy fields, whereas there is a considerable potential in better coordinating their objectives and measures. Using an analytical grid (S2D grid) linking SDGs and public health objectives and comprising 6 thematic issues and 56 categories, the research team conducted an assessment of health promotion programs in the city of Lausanne, Switzerland. Their objective was to determine whether SDGs and public health concerns can translate into complementary policy objectives, and what was the level of achievement of Lausanne in terms of implementation, intersectoral collaboration and avoidance of redundancy, regarding the vast array of measures potentially dealing with SDGs and health promotion. Results show that measures implemented by Lausanne deal with 80% of categories included in the S2D grid, with a high level of intersectorality and a low level of redundancy. These results also emphasize the fact that linkages between SDGs and health promotion go well beyond the SDG 3 dedicated to ‘good health and well-being’, and that the S2D grid could be used as a tool in favor of organizational change, promoting the collaboration between stakeholders often reluctant to engage in public health policies.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference23 articles.

1. World Health Organization. Adelaide Statement on Health in All Policies. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization; 2010.

2. UN-Habitat, World Health Organization. Integrating Health in Urban and Territorial Planning: A Sourcebook. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization; 2020.

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