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Exploring the rise and diversity of health and societal issues that use a public health approach: A scoping review and narrative synthesis

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posted on 2025-08-02, 11:23 authored by A Hurst, N Shaw, D Carrieri, K Stein, K Wyatt
There is an increase in calls across diverse issues for a “public health approach” however, it is not clear whether there is any shared understanding in approach in its conceptualisation or implementation. Our aims were to (1) identify and categorise the issues which discuss a public health approach within published literature since 2010, (2) chart the descriptions and applications of public health approaches across and within four purposively sampled categories of issues, and (3) capture any evaluations conducted. A scoping review of published literature was undertaken; Seven leading databases were searched: AMED, APA PsycInfo, ASSIA, CINAHL complete, Cochrane Library (Review), Embase, and MEDLINE for articles published between 2010 and 2022 which have applied, described or called for a “public health approach” to address any issue. 3,573 studies were identified through our initial searches, of these 1,635 articles were recognised for possible inclusion from analysis of titles and abstract. The final number of included studies was 1,314. We identified 28 categories, 26 of which were societal issues, where a public health approach is being advocated. We purposively selected four of these categories; adverse childhood experiences; end of life care; gambling addiction and violence reduction/ knife crime for further analysis of the approach including how it was conceptualised and operationalised; less than 13% of the studies described the implementation of a public health approach and there was considerable heterogeneity across and within categories as to how this was done. Since 2010 there have been increasing calls for a public health approach to be taken to address health and societal challenges. However, the operationalisation of a public health approach varied extensively and there were few evaluations of the approach. This has implications for policy makers and those involved in commissioning related approaches in the future as the evidence-base is limited.

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© 2024 Hurst et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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This is the final version. Available on open access from Public Library of Science via the DOI in this record Data Availability: No new data is generated. Summary of relevant study details are given in the supplementary tables.

Journal

PLOS Global Public Health

Pagination

e0002790-e0002790

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Editors

Atulomah, NO

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  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2024-01-15T11:32:41Z

FOA date

2024-01-15T11:33:45Z

Citation

Vol. 4(1), article e0002790

Department

  • Health and Community Sciences

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