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May 2004, Vol 94, No. 5 | American Journal of Public Health 705-709
© 2004 American Public Health Association


COMMENTARY

What’s New About the "New Public Health"?

Niyi Awofeso, PhD, MPH, MBChB

At the time this article was written, the author was with the School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, and the New South Wales Corrections Health Service, Matraville, Australia.

Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Niyi Awofeso, PhD, MPH, MBChB, New South Wales Corrections Health Service, Long Bay Correctional Complex, PO Box 150, Matraville, NSW 2034, Australia (e-mail: awofeson{at}chs.health.nsw.gov.au).

From its origins, when public health was integral to societies’ social structures, through the sanitary movement and contagion eras, when it evolved as a separate discipline, to the "new public health" era, when health promotion projects like Healthy Cities appear to be steering the discipline back to society’s social structure, public health seems to have come full circle. It is this observation that has led some to ask, "What’s new about the ‘new public health’?"

This article addresses the question by highlighting what is new about the health promotion era—including adapted components of previous eras that have been incorporated into its core activities—and its suitability in addressing established and emerging public health threats.




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