The Use of the Bolk Model for Positive Health and Living Environment in the Development of an Integrated Health Promotion Approach: A Case Study in a Socioeconomically Deprived Neighborhood in The Netherlands
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (i)
- To describe the role and use of the Bolk model in the development and implementation of an integrated health promotion approach in Amsterdam SE.
- (ii)
- To describe the experiences and perceptions of residents and other stakeholders in the community where this model has been implemented.
- (iii)
- To explore whether a cultural transformation had occurred from “disease management thinking” towards “Positive Health thinking” and towards better collaboration among stakeholders in Amsterdam SE.
2. Methods
2.1. The Bolk Model for Positive Health and Living Environment
2.2. Case Study—Setting
2.3. Case Study—Design
2.4. Case Study—Participatory Approach
2.4.1. Phase 1: Mapping Needs and Strengths of Residents in the Amsterdam South East District
2.4.2. Phase 2: Development of the Integrated Health Promotion Approach
2.4.3. Phase 3: Implementation and Evaluation of the Integrated Health Promotion Approach
2.4.4. Phase 4: Sustainment of the Integrated Health Promotion Approach
2.5. Ethical Consideration
3. Results
3.1. The Role and Use of the Bolk Model in the Development and Implementation of an Integrated Health Promotion Approach
3.1.1. Identifying Needs and Strengths of Residents of Residents by Means of the Bolk Model (Phase 1)
Appearance of the Neighborhood
Resident 1: “If you look outside and the weather is dark, you get dark yourself. But if the doors are closed and the windows are closed and the flowers and trees are nice and green, that makes me happy, it makes me smile. And then you go outside much happier.”
Social Cohesion
Resident 2: “I think people meet each other in community centers and there is a street culture here. Many people chat with each other on the street. At Multibron [read: a community center] we have a lot of accessible activities such as a chat hour.”
Resident 3: “I always make contact with everyone. When I go out in the street, I say: good morning, good day.”
Help and Care
Resident 4: “It is so nice that there are parents that are really “the help parents” in the school, they are like the mother of your child at that moment. If there is something [read: that they know about your child], and they know you or they know another mother, then it reaches you, (…) because you don’t always hear everything from the teacher.”
Knowledge and Self-Development
Resident 4: “You should work with the parents. Health can only be improved if you can get parents to change their mind setting as awareness of what is in the food products, how do I prepare it, how much do I eat, how do I balance it throughout the day and how do I combine it with exercise and how do I communicate my limits to my children.”
Organizations and Services in the Neighborhood
3.1.2. Mapping Needs and Strengths of Residents Using the Bolk Model (Phase 1)
3.1.3. Development of Health Promotion Pilots (HPPs) by Means of the Bolk Model (Phase 2)
3.1.4. Implementation of the HPPs by Means of the Bolk Model (Phase 3)
3.2. Experiences and Perceptions of Residents and Other Stakeholders in the Community of Working with the Bolk Model (Phase 3)
3.2.1. Understanding of Positive Health
Resident 9: “I do not know, maybe I do not understand [PH], maybe others do. I think [it is] a little bit difficult.”
3.2.2. Acceptance of Positive Health
Resident 14: “Yes, I think it can [PH to bring change in Venserpolder], it makes you more conscious of the choices you can make to be more positive or aware of your neighborhood or with yourself.”
3.2.3. Integration of Positive Health in Thinking and Behavior
Professional 2: “I have to say, the research, for me personally it was an eye opener. Health is not just health; it is also wellbeing.”
3.3. The Process of Cultural Transformation from “Disease Management Thinking” towards “Positive Health Thinking” and towards Better Collaboration among Stakeholders in Amsterdam SE (Phase 3 and 4)
3.3.1. Urgency
Professional 1: “People live seven years shorter, and the quality of healthy living is fourteen years shorter I believe. Well, you do not need more reasons I think.”
3.3.2. Guiding Coalition
Researcher 1: “Yes I think one of the powers [PH] is that it creates connections between different organizations and stakeholders. The people feel seen, that they all form part of the solution and that the resident is central.”
3.3.3. Change Vision and Communicating the Change Vision
Project coordinator 1: “The system world speaks a different language than the target group whom it concerns. The communication has to be target-bound, the information that is made public should be accessible for everyone.”
3.3.4. Barriers and Enabling Factors
Resident 15: “… The communication they [the project team] have with residents [is specifically good about this project in comparison to other projects], to involve residents and that they can take initiative to organize things and create workshops, etc.”
3.3.5. Sustainability
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Pilot | Expected Result | Target Group |
---|---|---|
1. Coffee hour in health care center | Informal talk about health and social support, improved access of health care professionals to residents | Residents Venserpolder |
2. Digital connecting | Digital map of informal care options and social activities available in the library | Residents Amsterdam South East |
3. Healthy shopping area | More healthy products in shops in the local shopping area | Residents Venserpolder |
4. Green and health workshops | Vegetable gardening workshops, | Women Venserpolder |
5. Healthy eating for kids | Teaching children food preparation and healthy eating | Children Venserpolder |
6. Man power | More activities for men | Men Venserpolder |
7. Accessibility | Better access to streets and buildings for people with special needs | Residents with special needs |
8. Thematic health events | Knowledge sharing about health and personal development | Residents Venserpolder |
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van Wietmarschen, H.A.; Staps, S.; Meijer, J.; Flinterman, J.F.; Jong, M.C. The Use of the Bolk Model for Positive Health and Living Environment in the Development of an Integrated Health Promotion Approach: A Case Study in a Socioeconomically Deprived Neighborhood in The Netherlands. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 2478. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042478
van Wietmarschen HA, Staps S, Meijer J, Flinterman JF, Jong MC. The Use of the Bolk Model for Positive Health and Living Environment in the Development of an Integrated Health Promotion Approach: A Case Study in a Socioeconomically Deprived Neighborhood in The Netherlands. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(4):2478. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042478
Chicago/Turabian Stylevan Wietmarschen, Herman A., Sjef Staps, Judith Meijer, J. Francisca Flinterman, and Miek C. Jong. 2022. "The Use of the Bolk Model for Positive Health and Living Environment in the Development of an Integrated Health Promotion Approach: A Case Study in a Socioeconomically Deprived Neighborhood in The Netherlands" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 4: 2478. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042478
APA Stylevan Wietmarschen, H. A., Staps, S., Meijer, J., Flinterman, J. F., & Jong, M. C. (2022). The Use of the Bolk Model for Positive Health and Living Environment in the Development of an Integrated Health Promotion Approach: A Case Study in a Socioeconomically Deprived Neighborhood in The Netherlands. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(4), 2478. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042478