Articles
Working
for a healthier people.
The First Minister and Deputy
First Minister explain why good health is their concern.
Investing for Health.
Minister for Health, Social
Services and Public Safety, Bairbre de Brún, introduces Investing
for Health.
Health improvement
plans.
The Investing for Health Team
outline the implementation, funding and monitoring of the
Investing for Health Strategy.
Time for cooperation
not competition.
Dr Bill McConnell suggests
that real engagement can help us prevent disease as opposed
to just dealing with the end results.
Investing for
Health - what does it mean for nursing?
Dr Carolyn Mason considers
the future for nurses in delivering the public health agenda.
Where progress
is built on community engagement.
Noel Rooney welcomes the fact
that community engagement is at the heart of Investing for
Health.
Why quality of
life is on Belfast City Council’s agenda.
William Francey explains why
he agrees health improvement is too important to leave to
the health service. Also, Ken Forbes outlines existing strategic
links with local councils.
Engaging ‘sanitary
policemen’ in community health and wellbeing.
Alan Burke recommends that
environmental health professionals embrace the broader health
agenda.
Learning to change.
Promoting Health asks the education
sector about its role in Investing for Health.
Does diversification
mean dissipation for health promotion?
Frances Cunning outlines some
of the recent changes to the structure of public health and
health promotion in England.
Meeting Scotland’s
‘step-change’ challenge.
Carol Tannahill shares some
of Scotland's recent developments in public health and health
promotion.
Where to now
for health promotion services?
Mary O'Neill considers the
future for health promotion services in the new policy climate.
Why community
engagement is not a ‘tick box’ procedure.
Eleanor Gill explains how the
community sector can feed its learning about partnerships
and consultation back into the implementation process of Investing
for Health.
Why voluntary
action is good for everyone’s health.
Seamus McAleavey outlines how
the voluntary sector can help deliver better health in more
ways than one.
Developing the
capacity to deliver.
Dr Viv Speller discusses work
underway in England to develop the skills of the wide range
of people who contribute to health improvement.
|