Fabian, Carlo
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Physical activity in public space: insights from a global community of practice applying photovoice as a tool for digital participatory place analysis
2024-03-01, Köckler, Heike, Shrestha, Rehana, Aslam, Atif Bilal, Berger, Tania, Börner, Susanne, Cheung, Clement, Fabian, Carlo, Shankavaram, Hiranmayi, Shrestha, Reshma, Shrestha, Sadichchha, Simon, Daniel
Physical activity in open spaces is a crucial topic of urban health around the globe. As cities and everyday life differ a lot in specific urban contexts, places for physical activity may vary in shape, perception and use by local people. A group of researchers from eight countries in Europe, South America and Asia used the same online-photovoice application to explore places in their cities regarding physical activity in public spaces. Using the same application in eight countries with diverse local participants, we collected a rich basis for a reflection on methodological issues, the usability of the online-photovoice application and determinants of physical activity in public spaces in contrasting cities. The paper aims to provide traceable documentation of a collaborative learning activity with an online-photovoice application. In doing so, results are presented from researchers’ self-reflection as a global community of practice on how the online-photovoice approach can be applied to place analysis for healthy urban development at different places with practitioners, communities, and scientists from diverse backgrounds. The paper contributes to a broader problem understanding of physical activity in public open spaces. As one result, we find that including aspects of safety and conflict in public space is highly relevant.
Exploring online health information seeking and sharing among older adults: a mini-review about acceptance, potentials, and barriers
2024, Bachofner, Yves, Seifert, Alexander, Sepahniya, Samin, Fabian, Carlo
Online health information seeking (OHIS) is understood by health care, health promotion, and disease prevention experts as a resource for healthy aging. It is particularly relevant for older adults since this population can benefit significantly from the accessibility and convenience of online health platforms and health information. Nevertheless, empirical findings regarding the acceptance, potentials, and barriers of OHIS among older adults are limited. This mini-review aims to explore the level of acceptance of OHIS, including passive reading of information and active interactions with peers, among the older population. Furthermore, it examines the potentials and barriers associated with such practices. The findings ultimately emphasize the evolving landscape of internet health information exploration among older adults and the potential advantages and challenges that may arise, especially in the context of active interactions with peers.
Smart healthy age-friendly environments (SHAFE) bridging innovation to health promotion and health service provision
2024, De Luca, Vincenzo, Marston, Hannah, Angelini, Leonardo, Militeva, Nadia, Klimczuk, Andrzej, Fabian, Carlo, Papitto, Patrizia, Bernardo, Joana, Ventura, Filipa, Silva, Rosa, Attaianese, Erminia, Korkmaz, Nilufer, Mercurio, Lorenzo, Rinaldi, Antonio Maria, Gentile, Maurizio, Polverino, Renato, Bone, Kenneth, van Staalduinen, Willeke, Apostolo, Joao, Dantas, Carina, Illario, Maddalena, Klimczuk, Andrzej
A number of experiences have demonstrated how digital solutions are effective in improving quality of life (QoL) and health outcomes for older adults. Smart Health Age-Friendly Environments (SHAFE) is a new concept introduced in Europe since 2017 that combines the concept of Age-Friendly Environments with Information Technologies, supported by health and community care to improve the health and disease management of older adults and during the life-course. This chapter aims to provide an initial overview of the experiences available not only in Europe, based on the research work of the participants of the International Interdisciplinary Network on Health and Well-being in an Age-Friendly Digital World (NET4Age-Friendly), which could be of interest to preventive, health and social authorities. The chapter reports good practices, pain points, and bottlenecks that may require a collaborative, interdisciplinary research approach to facilitate the transformations towards smart, sustainable, health and age-friendly cities and communities.
«Gefährdung» im Kontext von Früherkennung und Frühintervention
2023-05, Fabian, Carlo, Lienert, Pascal, Zumbrunn, Andrea
In den Konzepten und Leitpapieren zu Früherkennung und Frühintervention (F+F) wird häufig mit den Begriffen «Gefährdung», «gefährdete Personen» oder «Gefährdungseinschätzung» gearbeitet. Diese Begriffe werden aber kaum definiert, ausser, dass sie einen Bezug zur Gesundheit oder gesundheitlichen Entwicklung haben. Eine Klärung dieser Begrifflichkeiten hilft, den Ansatz der F+F besser zu fassen und eine griffigere Grundlage für die Praxis in den F+F-Prozessen zu schaffen. Das im Artikel diskutierte multifaktorielle Modell zur F+F von Infodrog kann hier eine gute Unterstützung sein.
Advancing urban green and blue space contributions to public health
2023-09, Hunter, Ruth Fiona, Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark, Fabian, Carlo, Murphy, Niamh, O'Hara, Kelly, Rappe, Erja, Sallis, James Fleming, Lambert, Estelle Victoria, Duenas, Olga Lucia Sarmiento, Sugiyama, Takemi, Kahlmeier, Sonja
Urban green and blue spaces (UGBS) have the potential to improve public health and wellbeing, address health inequities, and provide co-benefits for the environment, economy, and society. To achieve these ambitions, researchers should engage with communities, practitioners, and policy makers in a virtuous circle of research, policy, implementation, and active citizenship using the principles of co-design, co-implementation, co-evaluation, and cotranslation. This Viewpoint provides an integrated perspective on the challenges that hinder the delivery of healthenhancing UGBS and recommendations to address them. Our recommendations include: strengthening the evidence beyond cross-sectional research designs, strengthening the evidence base on UGBS intervention approaches, evaluating the effects on diverse population groups and communities, addressing inequities in the distribution and quality of UGBS, accelerating research on blue space, providing evidence for environmental effects, incorporating co-design approaches, developing innovative modelling methods, fostering whole-system evidence, harnessing political drivers, creating collaborations for sustainable UGBS action, and advancing evidence in low-income and middle-income countries. The full potential of UGBS as public health, social, economic, and environmental assets is yet to be realised. Acting on the research and translation recommendations will aid in addressing these challenges in collaboration with research, policy, practice, and communities.