Published: June 25, 2024 | Updated: June 24, 2024

North Idaho Alliance Women of Impact: In their words: What does a healthy community mean to you?

Marilee Wallace

Marilee Wallace

What does a healthy community mean to you? This was a question asked at the Onward & Upward Women’s conference. Here are some of the answers:

• Good jobs and education

• Everyone is accepted

• Safety and fairness

• Patriotism

• Everyone has a home

• Helping neighbors

• That there is a healthy college

• Access to health care for all

• Green spaces encouraging exercise

• Responsibility with grace

• Dancing (That was me!)

A deeper dive into this question found resources from the World Health Organization (WHO) defines a healthy city by a process, not an outcome. Key takeaways are:

People — A healthy city takes a human approach to development, prioritizing investment in people and ensuring access for all too common goods and services. This includes:

• investment in human and social capital as a strategic approach for urban development

• promoting inclusion, integration and non-discrimination

• building trust, resilience and a focus on ethics and values.

Participation — A healthy city leads by example ensuring community participation in decisions that affect where and how people live, their common goods and services. This includes:

• improved city spaces and services, based on the needs and assets in communities

• stronger accountability and governance for health and well-being

• empowered and resilient populations

• increased ownership over individual health and well-being.

Prosperity — A healthy city strives for enhanced community prosperity and strengthened assets through values-based governance of common goods and services. This includes:

• progressive measures of social progress

• investment in the circular economy

• universal minimum social protection.

Planet — A healthy city ensures that the health and well-being of both the people and the planet are at the heart of all the city’s internal and external policies. This includes:

• a whole-of-city approach to health and well-being

• coherence across levels of governance in the approach to health and well-being

• strengthened city health diplomacy.

Place — A healthy city creates an accessible social, physical and cultural environment that facilitates the pursuit of health and well-being. This includes:

• shifting from a needs-based to an assets-based approach

• human-centered urban development and planning

• integrating health equity and sustainability into urban development and planning

• enhanced inclusiveness in the use and governance of common spaces.

Peace — A healthy city leads by example by promoting and keeping peace in all its actions, policies and systems. This includes:

• institutions, governance systems and architecture that prioritize social justice and inclusive participation;

• the promotion of cultural norms of inclusion and equity, a non-exploitative egalitarian approach;

• formal governance and societal norms that tackle corruption, discrimination and all forms of violence.

NIA is open for all women in North Idaho who are wanting to learn and connect. Our only goal is to empower women to thrive and positively impact community. 

The Women of Impact Leadership Roundtable meets once a month for a nine-month series beginning each September to May. Our details are at www.theniallaince.com or join https://www.facebook.com/groups/972216519983800.

Next up: W.O.W Words of Wisdom (from wise women) Do you know someone that fits this? Send them our way!

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Marilee Wallace, IOM, president/CEO of the North Idaho Alliance Women of Impact. The Women of Impact Leadership Roundtable meets once a month for a nine-month series, and we base our monthly agenda on the word IMPACTED. She can be reached at marilee@theniallaince.com.