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      Healthy publics: enabling cultures and environments for health

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          Abstract

          Despite extraordinary advances in biomedicine and associated gains in human health and well-being, a growing number of health and well-being related challenges have remained or emerged in recent years. These challenges are often ‘more than biomedical’ in complexion, being social, cultural and environmental in terms of their key drivers and determinants, and underline the necessity of a concerted policy focus on generating healthy societies. Despite the apparent agreement on this diagnosis, the means to produce change are seldom clear, even when the turn to health and well-being requires sizable shifts in our understandings of public health and research practices. This paper sets out a platform from which research approaches, methods and translational pathways for enabling health and well-being can be built. The term ‘healthy publics’ allows us to shift the focus of public health away from ‘the public’ or individuals as targets for intervention, and away from the view that culture acts as a barrier to efficient biomedical intervention, towards a greater recognition of the public struggles that are involved in raising health issues, questioning what counts as healthy and unhealthy and assembling the evidence and experience to change practices and outcomes. Creating the conditions for health and well-being, we argue, requires an engaged research process in which public experiments in building and repairing social and material relations are staged and sustained even if, and especially when, the fates of those publics remain fragile and buffeted by competing and often more powerful public formations.

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          Safeguarding human health in the Anthropocene epoch: report of The Rockefeller Foundation–Lancet Commission on planetary health

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              Logics of interdisciplinarity

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                101685620
                45564
                Palgrave Commun
                Palgrave Commun
                Palgrave communications
                2055-1045
                25 May 2018
                15 May 2018
                31 May 2018
                : 4
                : 57
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Geography, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK
                [2 ]Department of History, College of Humanities, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK
                [3 ]Child Health and Health Complexity, Institute for Health Research, University of Exeter Medical School, Exeter, UK
                [4 ]University of Exeter Law School, Exeter, UK
                [5 ]Department of Psychology, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK
                [6 ]Lisbon University Institute (CIS/ISCTE-IUL), Lisbon, Portugal
                [7 ]Centre for Research in Ageing and Cognitive Health, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK
                [8 ]European Centre for the Environment and Human Health, University of Exeter Medical School, Truro, UK
                [9 ]Department of Politics and International relations, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK
                [10 ]Department of English, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK
                [11 ]Department of English and Film, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK
                [12 ]University of Exeter Medical School, Exeter, UK
                [13 ]College of Humanities, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK
                Author notes
                Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to S.H. ( Stephen.Hinchliffe@ 123456exeter.ac.uk )
                Article
                EMS77936
                10.1057/s41599-018-0113-9
                5978671
                29862036
                5793843a-15d1-4a34-a111-d9b33be80422

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