What's New

Internship

Research

Publication

Resources and Tools

Bibliography

Job Opportunities

Current Health Issues

Bibliography

  • Alexander H, MacDonald E. Evaluating policy-driven multi-agency partnership working: A cancer prevention strategy group and a multi-agency domestic abuse group. Presentation to the United Kingdom Evaluation Society Annual Conference, December 2001. (Available at: http://www.evaluationcanada.ca/distribution/200112_alexander_helen_macdonald_elspeth_2.pdf)

  • Anderson L, Shinn C, Fullilove M et al. The effectiveness of early childhood development programs: A systemic review. Am J Prev Med. 2003;24(S3): 32-46.

  • Angus et al, (1995), Sustainable Health Care for Canada, Queen’s-University of Ottawa Economic Projects, Ottawa (available at www.cprn.org), and Auer et al. (1995).

  • Baranowski T, Perry CL, Parcel GS. In: Glanz K, Lewis FM, Rimer RK, (Eds.). How individuals, environments and health behaviour interact. Health Behaviour and Health Education: Theory, Research and Practice, 2nd ed. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Inc.; 1997. p. 153-178.

  • Best A, Stokols D, Green LW, Leischow S, Holmes B, Buchholz K. An integrative framework for community partnering to translate theory into effective health promotion strategy. Am J Health Promot. 2003;18(2): 168-176.

  • Best A, Moor G, Holmes B, Clark PI, Bruce T, Leischow S, Buchholz K, Krajnak J. Health promotion dissemination and systems thinking: Towards an integrative model. Am J Health Behav. 2003;27(S3): S206-S216.

  • Billings J. Community development: A critical review of approaches to evaluation. J Adv Nurs. 2000;31(2): 472-480.

  • Birch S, Stoddart G, Beland F. Modeling the community as a determinant of health. Can J Public Health. 1998;89(6): 402-405.

  • Bryant T. Role of knowledge in public health and health promotion policy change. Health Promot Int. 2002;17(1): 89-98.

  • CART Project Team. Community action for health promotion: A review of methods and outcomes 1990-1995. Am J Prev Med. 1997;13(4): 229-239.

  • Coday M, Klesges LM, Garrison RJ, Johnson KC, O’Toole M, Morris GS. Health opportunities with physical exercise (HOPE): Social contextual interventions to reduce sedentary behaviour in urban settings. Health Educ Res. 2002;17(5): 637-647.

  • Cook A, Jardine A, Weinstein P. Using human disease outbreaks as a guide to multilevel ecosystem interventions. Environ Health Perspect. 2004; 112(11): 1143-1146. Population Health. Public Health Agency of Canada. http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/ph-sp/phdd/approach

  • Cummins SK , Jackson RJ. The Built Environment and Children’s Health. Pediatr Clin North Am. 2001;48(5): 1241-1252.

  • Deschesnes M, Martin C, Jomphe-Hill A. Comprehensive approaches to school health promotion: how to achieve broader implementation? Health Promot Int. 2003;18(4): 387-396.

  • Donaldson C C, Halma L, Gall N, (2002) “Setting Priorities and Allocating Resources in Regional Health Authorities: A Report from Two Pilot Exercises Using Program Budgeting and Marginal Analysis”.

  • Ebrahim S, Smith GD. Exporting failure? Coronary heart disease and stroke in developing countries. Int J Epidemiol. 2001;30(2): 201-205.

  • Edwards N. Population health: Determinants and interventions. Can J Public Health. 1999; 90(1): 10-11.

  • Edwards N, Mill J, Kothari A. Multiple Intervention Research Programs in Community Health. Can J Nurs Res. 2004;36(1): 40-55.

  • Emmons KM. Behavioural and Social Science Contributions to the Health of Adults in the United States. In Promoting Health: Intervention strategies from social and behavioural research. BD Smedley & SL Syme (Eds.), National Academy Press, Washington, D.C., 2000. p. 254-321.

  • Ensor T, Cooper S. Resource allocation and purchasing: influencing the demand side. Prepared for World Bank, Resource Allocation and Purchasing (RAP) Project. (March, 2002). Centre for Health Economics, University of York. www.york.ac.uk/inst/che/

  • Ensor T, Cooper S. Resource allocation and purchasing: influencing the demand side. The University of York, Centre for Health Economics, Heslington, University of York. Available at the web site: www.york.ac.uk/inst/che/

  • Farquharson K. Influencing policy transnationally: Pro- and anti-tobacco global advocacy networks. Aust J Pub Admin. 2003;62(4): 80-92.

  • Fielen AC, Girasek DC. Integrating perspectives on the prevention of unintentional injuries, p. 203-227. In: N Schneiderman, MA Speers, JM Silva, H Tomes & JH Gentry. Integrating behavioural and social sciences with public health. United Book Press, Inc., Baltimore, 2001.

  • Finding the Balance: Program Fidelity and Adaptation in Substance Abuse Prevention: A State of the Art Review. http://www.samhsa.gov/centers/csap/modelprograms/pdfs/FindingBalance.pdf

  • Frankish J. Study on the implementation of health goals in Canada. Institute of Health Promotion Research, UBC, 2000. A PDF file can be downloaded from http://www.sciencedirect.com

  • Frankish J, Kwan B, Flores J. Assessing the health of communities: Indicator projects and their impacts. Institute of Health Promotion Research, UBC, Sept 2002. A PDF file can be downloaded from http://www.ihpr.ubc.ca/publications.html

  • Frankish J, Veenstra G, Moulton G. Population health in Canada: Issues and challenges for policy, practice and research. Can J Public Health. 1999;90(1): S71-S75.

  • Glasgow RE, Vogt TM, Boles SM. Evaluating the public health impact of Health Promotion Interventions: The RE-AIM Framework. Am J Public Health. 1999;89(8): 1322-1327.

  • Goodman RM. Bridging the gap in effective program implementation: From concept to application. J Community Psychol. 2000;28(3): 309-321.

  • Gostin LO. Legal and public policy interventions to advance the population’s health. In Promoting Health: Intervention strategies from social and behavioural research. BD Smedley & SL Syme (Eds.), National Academy Press, Washington, D.C., 2000, p. 390-416.

  • Goyer KC, Gow J. Alternatives to current HIV/AIDS policies and practices in South African prinsons. J Public Health Policy. 2002;23(3): 303-323.

  • Green LW, Richard L, Potvin L. Ecological foundations of health promotion. Am J Health Promot. 1996;10(4): 270-281.

  • Hancock T, Labonte R, Edwards R. Indicators that count: Measuring population health at the community level. Can J Public Health. 1999;90(1): S22-S26.

  • Hawe P. Needs assessment must become more change-focused. Aust NZ J of Public Health 1996;20(5): 473-478.

  • Hawe P, Noort M, King L, Jordens C. Multiplying health gains: The critical role of capacity-building within health promotion programs. Health Policy. 1997;39(1): 29-42.

  • Hawe P, Shiell A. Social capital and health promotion. Soc Sci Med. 2000;51(6): 871-885.

  • Health Systems: Improving Performance, WHO, Geneva, especially chapter 2 “How Well do Health Systems Perform” (pages 23-46).

  • Healthcare Management FORUM, spring. Health Canada (2002), Economic Burden of Illness in Canada, 1998, Minister of Public Works and Government Services Canada (available at http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca).

  • Integrating Behavioural and Social Sciences with Public Health, Schneiderman N, Speers MA, Silva JM, Tomes H, and Gentry JH (Eds.), p. 141-158.

  • The International Union for Health Promotion and Education. The Evidence of Health Promotion Effectiveness: Shaping Public Health in a New Europe. A Report for the European Commission. Part One, Core Document. 2nd Ed., Jouve Composition and Impression. Paris. 2000.

  • Intersectoral action: Towards population health. Report of the Federal/Provincial Advisory Committee on Population Health. Ottawa: Health Canada, Communications Directorate, 1999.

  • Kingdon JW. Agenda, alternatives and public policies. New York: Harper Collins College Publishers. 1995.

  • Koepsell TD, Wagner EH, Cheadle AC, Patrick DL, Martin DC, Diehr PH, Perrin EB, Kristal AR, Allan-Andrilla CH, Dey LJ. Selected methodological issues in evaluating community-based health promotion and disease prevention programs. Annu Rev Public Health. 1992; 13: 31-57.

  • Koopman JS, Lynch JW. Individual causal models and population system models in epidemiology. Am J Public Health. 1999; 89(8): 1170-1174.

  • Kothari A, Birch S. Multilevel health promotion research: Conceptual and analytical considerations. Can J Nurs Res. 2004;36(1): 56-75.

  • Krauss M, Mueller N, Luke D. Interorganizational relationships within state tobacco control networks: A social network analysis. Prev Chronic Dis. 2004;1(4): 1-25.

  • Krieger N. Theories for social epidemiology in the 21st century: An ecosocial perspective. Int J Epidemiol. 2001;30(4): 668-677.

  • Kuhn M, Doucet C, Edwards N. Effectiveness of coalitions in heart health promotion, tobacco use reduction, and injury prevention: A systematic review of the literature 1990-1998. March 1999. Effective Public Health Practice Project.

  • Kumaranayake L, Watts C. Resource allocation and priority setting of HIV/AIDS interventions: Addressing the generalized epidemic in Sub-Saharan Africa. J Int Dev. 2001;13(4): 451-466.

  • Labonte R, Schrecker T, Sanders D, Meeus W. Fatal Indifference: The G8, Africa and Global Health. International Development Research Centre. Ottawa. 2004.

  • Laterveer L, Niessne LW, Yazbeck AS. Pro-poor health policies in poverty reduction strategies. Health Policy Plann. 2003;18(2): 138-145.

  • Locher AW, Didiion JA. Epidemic to endemic: The impact of HIV on health care policy and nursing practice. Policy, Politics & Nursing Practice. 2003;4(1): 62-70.

  • Mancini JA, Marek LI. Sustaining community-based programs for families: Conceptualization and measurement. Family Relations. 2004;53:339-347.

  • Mathias RG. Death Sentence: Canada’s Drug Laws. A public health framework for drug control in Canada. Monograph, Department of Health Care and Epidemiology, University of British Columbia. 2002. Available on the following web site: http://www.ubc.ca/

  • Mayne J. Addressing attribution through contribution analysis: Using performance measures sensibly. Can J Program Eval. 2001;16(1): 1-24.

  • McCoy D, Sanders D, Baum F, Narayan T, Legge D. Pushing the international health research agenda towards equity and effectiveness. Lancet. 2004;364(9445): 1630-1631.

  • McDowell I, Spasoff R, Kristjansson B. Evaluation methods and practice: On the classification of population health measurements. Am J Public Health. 2004;94(3): 388-393.

  • McLaughlin, JA, Jordan, GB. Logic models: A tool for telling your program’s performance story. Eval Program Plann. 1999;22(1): 65-72.

  • McLoughlin E, Fairweather. Influence of free trade on the politics of safety. Inj Prev. 2002; 8(1): 3-5.

  • Meadows D. Leverage points: Places to Intervene in a System. Sustainability Institute, 1999. http://www.sustainabilityinstitute.org/pubs/Leverage_Points.pdf

  • Merzel C, D’Affiliti J. Reconsidering community-based health promotion: Promise, performance, and potential. Am J Public Health. 2003;93(4): 557-574.

  • Milio N. Healthy Cities: the new public health and supportive research. Health Promot Int. 1990;5(4): 291-297.

  • Moyer A, Verhovsek H, Wilson VL. Facilitating the shift to population-based public health programs: Innovation through the use of framework and logic model tools. Can J Public Health. 1997;88(2): 95-98.

  • Murphy BK. The political economy of AIDS. http://www.redflagsweekly.com/features/2004_feb17_1.html

  • Naylor’s report on SARS: http://www.health.gov.on.ca/english/public/pub/ministry_reports/walker_panel_2003/one_public_health.pdf

  • Newbold KB, Eyles J, Birch S, Spencer A. Allocating resources in health care: Alternative approaches to measuring needs in resource allocation formula in Ontario. Health Place. 1998; 4(1): 79-89.

  • Nigg CR, Allegrante JP, Ory M. Theory-comparison and multiple-behaviour research: Common themes advancing health behaviour research. Health Educ Res. 2002;17(5): 670-679.

  • Office of the Auditor General of Canada (2002), Health Canada: Federal support of health care delivery, especially chapter 3 (available at www.oag-bvg.gc.ca/domino/reports.nsf/html/20020903ce.html)

  • Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion: www.who.int/hpr/nph/docs/ottawa-charter-hp.pdf

  • Ozanne-Smith J, Day L, Stathakis V, Sherrard J. Controlled evaluation of a community based injury prevention program in Australia. Inj Prev. 2002; 8: 18-22.

  • Pluye P, Potvin L, Denis JL. Making public health programs last: Conceptualizing sustainability. Eval Program Plann. 2004;27(2): 121-133.

  • Pluye P, Potvin L, Denis JL, Pelletier J, Mannoni C. Program sustainability begins with the first events. Eval Program Plann. 2005;28(2): 123-137.

  • Porteous N, Sheldrick BJ, Stewart PJ. Introducing program teams to Logic models: Facilitating the learning process. Can J Program Evaluation. Special Issue 2002;17(3): 113-142.

  • Provincial Health Indicators Work Group. Core Population Health Indicators for Ontario. Public Health and Epidemiology Report Ontario. Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care. Dec. 17, 1999;10(12): 1-5. http://www.gov.on.ca/

  • Raphael D. Cardiovascular health in Canada: Are we fiddling while Rome is Burning? Can J Public Health. 2001;92(6): 441-442.

  • Renger, R, Titcomb, A. A three-step approach to teaching logic models. Am J Eval. 2002;23(4): 493-503.

  • Richard L, Lehoux P, Breton E, Denise JL, Labrie L, Leonard C. Implementing the ecological approach to tobacco control programs: Results of a case study. Eval Program Plann. 2004; 27(4): 409-421.

  • Richard L, Potvin L, Kishchuk N, Prlic H, Green LW. Assessment of the integration of the ecological approach in health promotion programs. Am J Health Promot. 1996;10(4): 318-328.

  • Riegelman R, Verme D, Rochon J, El-Mohandes A. Interaction and intervention modeling: Predicting and extrapolating the impact of multiple interventions. Ann Epidemiol. 2002;12(3):151-156.

  • Riley B, Elliott S, Taylor M, Cameron R, Walker R. Dissemination of Heart Health Promotion: Lessons from the Canadian Heart Health Initiative Ontario Project. IUHPE - Promotion and Education Supplement 1. 2001: p. 26-30.

  • Romanow Commission Discussion Papers with emphasis on multi-jurisdictional influences on health care reform:

  • Rousseau DM. Issues of level in organizational research: multi-level and cross-level perspectives. Research in Organizational Behaviour 1985;7:1-37.

  • Discussion Paper #12 – H Leeson. Constitutional Jurisdiction over health and health care services in Canada, Aug 2002

  • Discussion Paper #18 – F Rocher, M Smith. Federalism and Health Care: The impact of political-institutional dynamics on the Canadian health care system, Aug 2002

  • Discussion Paper #21 – Health care politics and the intergovernmental framework in Canada, 2002

  • Discussion Paper #29 – R Pelletier. Intergovernmental Cooperation Mechanisms: Factors for Change, Oct 2002

  • Discussion Paper #34 – A Maioni. Roles and Responsibilities in Health Care Policy, Nov 2002

  • Discussion Paper #39 – F Champagne. The ability to manage change in health care organizations, Nov 2002

  • Rutten A, von Lengerke T, Abel T, Kannas L, Luschen G, Diaz JAR, Vinck J, van der Zee J. Policy, competence and participation: Empirical evidence for a multilevel health promotion model. Health Promot Int. 2000;15(1): 33-47.

  • Sallis JF, Bauman A, Pratt M. Environmental and policy interventions to promote physical activity. Am J Prev Med. 1998;15(4): 379-397.

  • Sallis JF, Owen N. Ecological models. In: Glanz K, Lewis FM, Rimer RK, editors. Health Behaviour and Health Education: Theory, Research and Practice. 2nd ed. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Inc.; 1997. p. 403-424.

  • Sanderson, C, Haglund BJA, Tillgren P, Svanstrom L, Ostenson C, Hold L, Ullen H, Smajkic A. Effect and stage models in community intervention programmes; and the development of the Model for Management of Intervention Programme Preparation (MMIPP). Health Promo Int. 1996;11(2): 143-156.

  • Schulman J, Sacks J, Provenzano. State level estimates of the incidence and economic burden of head injuries stemming from non-universal use of bicycle helmets. Inj Prev. 2002;8(1): 47-52.

  • Schwab M, Syme SL. On paradigms, community participation and the future of public health. Am J Public Health. 1997;87(12): 2049-2051.

  • St Leger L. Health and nature – new challenges for health promotion. Health Promot Int. 2003;18(3): 173-175.

  • Setting priorities in injury prevention: The application of an incidence based cost model. Inj Prev. 2002;8(1): 74-78.

  • Spasoff R A. (1999), Epidemiologic methods for Health Policy, Oxford University Press, new York, especially chapter 1 “Policy, Public Policy and Health Policy”, and chapter 7 “Policy Implementation” p. 169-173.

  • Spasoff RA. (1999), “Allocating health resources” (p. 172-179. World Health Organization (2000)

  • Stahl T, Rutten A, Nutbeam D, Kannas L. The importance of policy orientation and environment on physical activity participation – a comparative analysis between Eastern Germany, Western Germany and Finland. Health Promot Int. 2002;17(3): 235-246.

  • Stokols D. Translating social ecological theory into guidelines for community health promotion. Am J Health Promot. 1996;10(4): 282-298.

  • Stone D. Policy Paradox: The art of political decision-making. WW. Norton & Company. New York. 2002. p. 17-85.

  • Thompson D, Litthejohns LB, Smith N. Caught in the web: Piloting a methodology to assess community capacity in a rural heart health project. Can J Program Eval. 2000;15(2): 35-55.

  • Towner E, Dowswell T. Community-based childhood injury prevention interventions: what works? Health Promot Int. 2002;17(3): 273-284.

  • Treasury Board Secretariat. The development of results-based management and accountability frameworks for horizontal initiatives. Ottawa: Author, June 2002. (Also available at: www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/eval/tools_outils/comp-acc_e.asp)

  • Treasury Board Secretariat (TBS) (2001), Guide for the development of results-based management and accountability frameworks, TBS, Ottawa, and TBS (2002).

  • The development of results-based management and accountability frameworks for horizontal initiatives, TBS, Ottawa (available at www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/eval/tools_outils/rmaf_crgar_e.asp).

  • Vernon IS, Jumper-Thurman P. Prevention of HIV/AIDS in Native American Communities: Promising interventions. Public Health Rep. 2002;117(1): S96-S103.

  • Wandersman, A. Community mobilization for prevention and health promotion can work. In N. Schneiderman, MA Speers, JM Silva, H Tomes, & JH Gentry (Eds.), Integrating behavioral and social sciences with public health. Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association; 2001. p. 231-247.

  • Warner KE. The need for, and value of, a multi-level approach to disease prevention: The case of tobacco control. In Promoting Health: Intervention strategies from social and behavioural research. BD Smedley & SL Syme (Eds.), National Academy Press, Washington, D.C., 2000. p. 417-449.

  • Weed DL. Beyond black box epidemiology. Am J Public Health. 1998;88(1): 12-14.

  • Wisotzky M, Albuquerque M, Pechacek RF, Park BZ. The national tobacco control program: Focusing on policy to broaden impact. Public Health Rep. 2004;119(3): 303-310.

 

 

 

Français | About Us | Contact Us | Site Map | Links

Last modified November 7, 2007