What is it about?
It is well recognized that the design of the built environment influences health. However, we lack efficient mechanisms for market investment in health-promoting property. Health and wellness metrics for use by the real estate industry are needed. This November 2014 article in the health policy journal Health Affairs discusses important considerations and necessary next steps drawing upon lessons learned from the green building movement.
Featured Image
Why is it important?
There is growing demand within healthcare, public health, and the real estate industry to improve the design of the built environment to better promote health and wellness at a national scale. A critical first step will be the development of health and wellness metrics to help unify efforts to achieve these goals. This article helps readers from diverse backgrounds understand emerging opportunities for progress.
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Building Healthy Communities: Establishing Health And Wellness Metrics For Use Within The Real Estate Industry, Health Affairs, November 2014, Health Affairs,
DOI: 10.1377/hlthaff.2014.0654.
You can read the full text:
Resources
U.S. Green Building Council Blog Post & Video: The Drive to Make Healthy Places Investable
U.S. Green Building Council [INSIGHT Article]: "The Drive to Make Healthy Places Investable"
U.S. Green Building Council INSIGHT short article discussing the need to establish practice-oriented health and wellness metrics for the real estate industry -- the impetus for commentary by Dr. Matthew Trowbridge (University of Virginia & USGBC Senior Research Fellow) and Chris Pyke (VP Research, USGBC).
Green Health Initiative - National Collaborative on Childhood Obesity Research (NCCOR)
RWJF: Exploring New Opportunities to Align Health and Community Development Sectors are Highlighted in the November 2014 Issue of Health Affairs
Contributors
The following have contributed to this page