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Report : Community Network Forum
Author/contributor
Title
Report : Community Network Forum
Abstract
Health promotion is an activity that community organizations can adopt to enhance visibility and credibility in their communities.
Health promotion activities can respond to real needs of different groups and create opportunities to engage the public system with the community organization and the constituencies it serves.
For the public network, a community organization that has established a health promotion role has the potential to become a prime partner in helping an institution better serve its target population.
In recent years, community networks have developed health promotion programs that have reached thousands of community members and can now demonstrate positive results. The Forum will discuss how this development is resulting in promising and best practices, and inspiring a range of public and community interests to engage in health promotion for English-speaking communities.
Date
March 30, 2016
Pages
44
Language
en
Rights
You are not authorized to use or reproduce this work for any commercial purpose or to further distribute, perform, or alter works in any way without express permission of the owner of the copyright or proxy.
Citation
Community Health and Social Services Network (CHSSN). Report : Community Network Forum, March 30, 2016.
Geographical area
Type
Contributing CKOL partner
Link to this record
Related contributing CKOL partners
Community Health and Social Services Network (CHSSN)
Founded:
2000
Constituents:
English-language health and social service sector organizations, foundations, etc. in the province of Québec
Website:
https://chssn.org
Activities:
Developing projects and partnerships that link community and public partners; strengthening networks at the local, regional and provincial levels on health determinants; working to influence public policy and develop services; publishing newsletters on health and outcomes research; supporting member organizations for primary health care, community development, and population health
Former Name:
none