Research Article Open Access Double-Blind Peer Review

HEALTHY CITIES BY DESIGN: INTEGRATING URBAN PLANNING AND PUBLIC HEALTH

Michael Smith John·Maria Elena González·James Lee David
Published 05 June 2025
Vol. 13, No. 2 (2025)
pp. 1-20
CC BY 4.0
  1. 1
    Michael Smith John
    Florida International University
    US
  2. 2
    Maria Elena González
    Florida International University.
    US
  3. 3
    James Lee David
    Florida International University
    US

This article delves into the issue of inequity in global healthcare access and emphasizes the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration in healthcare delivery models. It highlights the Healthy Cities model, focusing on the "Healthy Communities" approach by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). Successful initiatives in public health should prioritize the community as the central unit of analysis. However, many existing studies fail to consider the unique community factors that affect the success of public health endeavors. This article addresses this crucial but often overlooked issue by examining the sustainable development of community health initiatives based on the Healthy Cities model. It specifically investigates the factors that contribute to the successful and sustainable development of such initiatives in various urban environments. The case study of Miami-Dade County serves as an illustrative example. By analyzing secondary sources, observational data, and conducting semi-structured interviews with programmatic leaders and stakeholders, this study reveals a paradigm that can be applied to different settings, aiding in the formulation of successful and sustainable community health initiatives

JournalPublic Policy and Administration Studies Journal
ISSN3065-0631
Volume / IssueVol. 13, No. 2 (2025)
Pages1-20
Published05 June 2025
DOI10.5281/zenodo.15601510
Access Open Access
LicenseCC BY 4.0 — reuse with attribution
PublisherKeith Publications
John , M., González , M., David, J. (2025). HEALTHY CITIES BY DESIGN: INTEGRATING URBAN PLANNING AND PUBLIC HEALTH. Public Policy and Administration Studies Journal, Vol. 13 No. 2, pp. 1-20. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15601510

 Submit Your Research to Public Policy and Administration Studies Journal

We invite original research articles, review papers, and case studies. Benefit from rigorous double-blind peer review, rapid decision within 4–8 weeks, DOI for every article, and worldwide open-access distribution.