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Considerations for an urban health perspective in Chile from the “Quiero Mi Barrio” program

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES

To explore the perceptions of residents regarding their health and well-being in areas of personal and collective life, in relation to the experience of urban transformation originated by the Program for the Recovery of Neighborhoods in Chile “Quiero mi Barrio” (PQMB).

METHODS

Qualitative study conducted in eight neighborhoods, which were subject to interventions between 2012–2015, located in seven communes of Chile: Arica, Renca, Padre Las Casas, Villarrica, Castro, Ancud. Eighteen focus groups and 27 interviews were conducted between 2018 and 2019. A content analysis was carried out following the social determinants of health approach.

RESULTS

Material conditions of neighborhood infrastructure and psychosocial determinants were the main emerging and predominant categories in the residents’ narratives. The new or improved infrastructure enhances sports and playing practices, as well as contributes to the feeling of safety and to the improvement of walkable spaces, support networks, socialization and dynamization of social organization. However, neglected aspects were visualized. The program had limitations of structural character that operate locally, such as aging, individual lifestyles that limit participation, and contexts of insecurity, especially in neighborhoods victims of drug trafficking.

CONCLUSIONS

The urban changes originated by the PQMB included improvements in neighborhood infrastructure and in the psychosocial environment, which are perceived by residents as beneficial aspects and promoters of collective wellbeing. However, global phenomena, and those related to the program, limit its scope and have repercussions on the perception of overall wellbeing of the residents in the neighborhoods. To go deeper into how this or other state neighborhood programs may or may not favor equitable access of different social groups, or which works may be better used by the groups, is an aspect that enhances the integral action with other sectors and local actors in the territories.

Social Determinants of Health; Urban Renewal; Community Participation; Neighborhood Characteristics; Qualitative Research; Chile

INTRODUCTION

In several Latin American and European cities, residential segregation and socioeconomic inequality have affected residents’ quality of life11.Vlahov D. A pivotal moment for urban health. Cad Saude Publica. 2015;31 Suppl 1:7-8. https://doi.org/10.1590/0102-311xpe01s115
https://doi.org/10.1590/0102-311xpe01s11...
,22.Borrell C, Pasarin MI. Desigualdad en salud y territorio urbano. Gac Sanit. 2004;18(1):1-4.. Among Latin American countries, Chile has reached urbanization levels as high as 87.8%, according to data from its 2017 Census, and felt the same global phenomena of residential segregation and socioeconomic inequality which brought territorial implications33.Sabatini F, Rasse A, Cáceres G, Robles MS, Trebilcock MP. Promotores inmobiliarios, gentrificación y segregación residencial en Santiago de Chile. Rev Mex Sociol. 2017;79(2):229-60. and deteriorated urban-rural living conditions.

In 2000, 2006, and 2016, the National Quality of Life Survey, conducted by the Chilean Ministry of Health44.Ministerio de Salud (CL), Subsecretaria de Salud Pública, Departamento de Epidemiología, División de Planificación Sanitaria. Encuesta de Calidad de Vida y Salud (ENCAVI): resultados Abril 2017. Santiago de Chile; 2017., found that its communities lacked infrastructure and public security and showed a weak connection between citizens and social organizations, key entities to construct healthy spaces for good living. In 2018 and 2020, governmental bodies and organizations linked to urban planning created microscale indicators to evaluate national areas, many of which showed instable environmental accessibility and infrastructure, crucial dimensions to guarantee their populations a sense of equity, justice, and well-being55.Ministerio de Bienes Nacionales (CL). Infraestructura de Datos Geoespaciales de Chile. Visor de mapas de la IDE Chile. Santiago de Chile: IDE; 2020..

Along with the increase in chronic non-communicable diseases66.Organización Mundial de la Salud, Organización Panamericana de la Salud. Plan de Acción sobre la Salud en todas las Políticas. In: 29ª Conferencia Sanitaria Panamericana: 69ª Sesión del Comité Regional de la OMS para las Américas; 25-29 de Sept 2017; Washington, D.C. 8 p., healthcare in Chile has promoted the social determinants of health (SDH) approach since 2005, seeking well-being and health equity77.Goic-G A. El sistema de salud de Chile: una tarea pendiente. Rev Med Chil. 2015;143(6):774-86. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0034-98872015000600011
https://doi.org/10.4067/S0034-9887201500...
and producing guidelines to find the structural dimensions of health inequality, including the conditions “in which life takes place”88.Organización Mundial de la Salud, Comisión de Determinantes Sociales de la Salud. Subsanar las desigualdades en una generación: alcanzar la equidad sanitaria actuando sobre los determinantes sociales de la salud: informe final de la Comisión OMS Sobre Determinantes Sociales de la Salud. Ginebra: OMS; 2008.. Health initiatives, undertaken in 200999.Ministério de Salu (CL). Barrios vulnerables 2009: contribuyendo al desarrollo de capacidades barriales en la reducción de inequidades que obstaculizan y limitan el acceso a salud. Santiago de Chile; 2010., addressed several urbanization problems, privileging a territorial approach aimed at integrating SDH into health agendas and avoiding achieving continuity or projecting health policies articulated with other sectors.

On the other hand, residential segregation and its social effects have also occupied a central space in the design of strategies1010.Ministerio de Vivienda y Urbanismo (CL). La recuperación de barrios a lo largo de Chile. Santiago de Chile; MINVU; 2014.within the recent framework for public policies on housing and urban planning in Chile. The Chilean Ministry of Housing and Urban Planning created the neighborhood recovery program “Quiero Mi Barrio” (PQMB) (I Love My Neighborhood Program in Spanish) in 2006. By 2017, it had promoted interventions in 520 neighborhoods across 15 regions, conducting 3,691 works and benefitting 1,132,714 residents. It currently aims to “improve quality of life in neighborhoods dealing with social segregation and/or vulnerability or varying degrees of urban deterioration, including them in a participatory, comprehensive, and viable process of local urban regeneration”1111.Ministerio de Vivienda y Urbanismo (CL), División Jurídica. Decreto Supremo N°14, de 22 de enero de 2007. Reglamenta Programa de Recuperación de Barrios. Santiago de Chile:MINVU; 2007.. Although the core principles of the Program do not make explicit their interest in influencing “health” of population, its design directly affects what the health sector consider intermediate SDH, including participation in social groups and improving local urban resources and services.

To favor integrative processes of public policy initiatives, this study aimed to explore residents’ perceptions of their health and well-being in personal and collective life areas in relation to urban transformation experiences stemming from the Chilean program to recover neighborhoods “Quiero mi Barrio” (PQMB). This study provides an organizing and reflexive framework to highlight the benefits and limitations resulting from the neighborhood recovery process to broaden its understanding and recognize the scope of these actions to produce urban spaces.

METHODS

This qualitative study was conducted between 2018 and 2019 and adopts the SDH approach to assess areas of results1212.Borrell C, Malmusi D, Artazcoz L, Diez E, Pasarín MI, Rodríguez-Sanz M, et al. Las desigualdades sociales en salud en España. Gac Sanit. 2012;26(2):182-9. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gaceta.2011.07.024
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gaceta.2011.07...
, deeming them as large domains of constraints on the circumstances or situations in which “people are born, grow up, live, work, and grow old”1313.World Health Organization, Commission on Social Determinants of Health. Closing the gap in a generation: health equity through action on the social determinants of health: final report of the Commission on Social Determinants of Health. Geneva (CH); 2008. and in which dominant political, economic, and social actions have strong repercussions to produce and reproduce social health inequality. Our sample consisted of eight neighborhoods which received interventions beginning between 2011 and 2012 and ending three to four years later. To select neighborhoods for analysis, four administrative regions were classified according to their geography, climate and population density to incorporate heterogeneous elements into our sample, such as being in an area with high migratory exchange, strong dissatisfaction with physical and social environments, social isolation, conflictivity and fragility political-territorial. In this study, neighborhoods were chosen based on the beginning of interventions (all same year) and feasibility of access (contacts, referents). The available documentation was analyzed to assess each neighborhood and synthesize the conducted interventions (Chart 1).

Chart 1
Characteristics of the chosen neighborhoods and performed interventions.

To obtain data, 18 focus groups (FG) were structured and 27 semi-structured interviews (I), by a team of anthropologists. A cumulative theoretical sampling was used with a saturation criterion1414.Valles MS. Técnicas cualitaticas de investigação social: reflexión metodológica y práctica professional. Madrid (ES): Editorial Síntesis; 1999.. The following criteria were established to structure FG and conduct I: older adults with and without a social role in their community (aged ≥60 years), young people (aged 15-20 years), and women with preschool-aged children and emerging profiles. During the interviews, aspects of structuring processes, changes perceived in neighborhoods, and assessments of these changes in health and collective well-being were addressed. FG and I were recorded, transcribed, and manually analyzed via open categories to reduce, organize, and structure data by analogy around opinions and substantial ideas which were common to groups or showed divergences with a greater descriptive than interpretative focus, according to SDH macrocategories1515.Pérez-Serrano G. Investigación cualitativa: retos e interrogantes. Tomo II: Técnicas de análisis de datos. Madrid (ES): La Muralla; 2002.. Results were triangulated by the different researchers collaborating in this study.

This study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the Faculty of the Universidad de La Frontera (Temuco, Chile) for studies on human beings. All interviewees agreed to participate.

RESULTS

We organized our results into two highly interrelated neighborhood constraints predominating in residents’ accounts: a) material and b) psychosocial categories. We describe both the perceived beneficial aspects of interventions and their overlooked or limiting aspects for communities’ well-being.

a) Material constraints in neighborhoods (Charts 2 and 3)

Chart 2
Contributions by the Quiero mi Barrio Program (PQMB) to residential well-being.

Chart 3
Aspects of the residential surroundings negatively associated or pending with the “Quiero mi Barrio” program.

Participants perceive PQMB as playing a relevant role in improving the infrastructure of their neighborhoods, promoting new practices, uses of public space, and a positive perception of the area. They find that the construction of playgrounds and parks constitutes spaces which promote physical activity and play among young people and children and social meetings among neighbors. Removing illegal dump sites emerges as a direct PQMB action as well as an indirect one due to other interventions, such as lighting and reconverting spaces for community use. Interviewees also indicate that the spaces PQMB reconverted into public circulation areas, with lit and decorated sidewalks, provide residents with greater security. The PQMB paved some streets in two neighborhoods, which participants found improved mobility and reduced falls. These PQMB improvements indirectly created an expectation of added value to local houses.

Regarding the aspects participants deemed the PQMB had overlooked, improving deteriorated sidewalks or streets emerged often in persons’ accounts, an aspect it barely included in its actions. In some neighborhoods, groups consuming alcohol or committing vandalism use such remodeled spaces (parks and multipurpose fields) constitute an outcome the program failed to foresee. On the other hand, we found few indications of coordination with other actors such as health, education,or aid agencies. Further, the construction of a park displaced the installation of a traveling vegetable market which supplied a neighborhood in Arica and generated informal sources of work. Finally, excluding houses as an object for improvement or, if impossible, directly coordinating with public entities which address this need constitutes another element straining the comprehensive nature of PMBQ interventions, ignoring that such improvements are contingent to residents’ individual resources.

b) Psychosocial constraints (Charts 4 and 5)

Chart 4
Contributions of the “Quiero mi Barrio” program to individual and collective psychosocial well-being.

Chart 5
Psychosocial factors negatively associated or pending with the Quiero mi Barrio program.

Interviewees claimed feeling satisfied with the aesthetic of the neighborhood after the promoted changes and with achieving a positive outcome after the end of a process which took years of effort to improve their neighborhoods. At the time PQMB interventions begin, most neighborhoods face great housing insecurity and locals feel abandoned. Residents note that its arrival helped “to promote the self-esteem of the community” after they had experience scant support toward neighborhood improvements. Some locals value the direct PQMB actions which reinforced neighborhood memory and identity. All neighborhoods showed a drive to participate in common activities, although limited to the scope of the program. Interviewees also point to the mobilization of local leaders, who gave rise, in certain cases, to a type of organization which followed the PQMB and felt motivated to take care of the interventions and create new projects. The most common element across neighborhoods relates to the use of parks and squares — which promoted mother-children and grandmother-grandchildren coexistence in open spaces — and the benefit multipurpose fields brought to young people, men, and those who do sports. The improvement of community centers contributed to socializing, above all, older adults, housewives, and caregivers, who referred to these spaces as affecting positive their mental health. Moreover, after neighborhoods were improved and cultural centers, built, community centers began to be used for private family events (e.g., marriages, birthdays, etc.). Participants valued the aforementioned lighting of streets and public spaces as it fosters a feeling of security in neighborhoods suffering from crime, and drug trafficking.

The overlooked or limiting aspects related to program interventions include the permanent tension between the aims of the PQMB and pre-existing neighborhood dynamics. This dimension cuts across all our studied cases. We found historical conflicts between locals or leaders, socioeconomic differences, dangerous sectors within neighborhoods (e.g., drug abuse or trafficking), and a style of social leadership which sectorized actions. PQMB interventions were unable to alleviate these issues which seriously affected participation, space and constructed work use, security, and trust among locals. Neighborhoods perceived as highly vulnerable socially seem to receive no different management or treatment from those free of this connotation.

On the other hand, social life within neighborhoods (established decades earlier) is contrasted with current practices and lifestyles which exclude or reduce community life. This phenomenon is based on elements such as interests for individual benefit, more intense working lifestyles, residents’ aging, leaders’ fatigue, inhabitants’ migration, and young people’s demotivation.

In a more direct relation with PQMB management, locals from all neighborhoods recount the abrupt end of interventions, leaving a feeling of dissatisfaction among their leaders. We should point out that the program operates by creating a previously absent local organizational structure (the Neighborhood Development Board), which, although incorporating local leaders, involves coordination efforts among leaders who may be in conflict or unprepared. Some residents note that the arrival of the PQMB shifts previous dynamics of neighborhood empowerment to the improvement of spaces.

In some cases, the nature of the works has also caused a feeling of exclusion or self-exclusion in some groups (such as in older adults and young women) during the selection process for works or the type of work to be undertaken. Neighborhood insecurity (associated with crime and drug trafficking) often represents a determining element in residents’ decision to live their lives inside their homes, avoiding public spaces in the neighborhood and, therefore, their neighbors.

DISCUSSION

PQMB is a program that focuses on improving local urban infrastructures by recovering or socially reinforcing, in a very short timeframe, the trajectory of neighborhoods and locals’ interpersonal and cultural experiences. Thus, we must interpret these experiences, adjusting them to social realities and the history of these neighborhoods, most of which emerged from past social housing programs and, in some cases, under processes of settlement and relocation.

Note that, despite differences in geography, climate, and social fabric, the works performed in the neighborhoods are similar, with only a few distinctive features due to their co-designing strategies. Nevertheless, participants generally have a positive perception of these interventions: a new or improved infrastructure represents neighborhood encounters in several places in which state aid has been absent for decades1616.Rodríguez A, Sugranyes A. Los con techo: un desafio para la política de vivienda social. Santiago de Chile: Ediciones SUR; 2005.. This infrastructure brings tremendous potential to reinforce and expand access to sport and recreational spaces so neighbors and relatives can coexist and socialize, infusing social organization with a certain dynamism. The aspects we mentioned function as elements which contribute to promote individual and collective health – and in some cases – restore people’s dignity.

Although no previous studies in health in Chile have addressed this frame of action, population studies1717.Araya R, Montgomery A, Rojas G, Fritsch R, Solis J, Signorelli A, et al. Common mental disorders and the built environment in Santiago, Chile. Br J Psychiatry. 2007;190:394-401. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.bp.106.024596
https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.bp.106.02459...
,1818.Kim H, Grogan-Kaylor A, Han Y, Maurizi L, Delva J. The association of neighborhood characteristics and domestic violence in Santiago, Chile. J Urban Health. 2013;90(1):41-55. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11524-012-9706-6
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11524-012-9706-...
emphasize the importance of neighborhood contexts, finding them as relevant to their inhabitants’ psychosocial experiences. International studies on processes of “urban regeneration” in Europe show beneficial results in individuals’ mental health and perceived well-being. Interventions facilitate “healthy” spaces favoring walkability, social integration, and a perception of security, promoting residents’ social and physical functionality and overall well-being, including the aesthetic function of neighborhoods1919.Jalaludin B, Maxwell M, Saddik B, Lobb E, Byun R, Gutierrez R, et al. A pre-and-post study of an urban renewal program in a socially disadvantaged neighbourhood in Sydney, Australia. BMC Public Health. 2012;12:521. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-12-521
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-12-521...
,2020.Mehdipanah R, Malmusi D, Muntaner C, Borrell C. An evaluation of an urban renewal program and its effects on neighborhood resident’s overall wellbeing using concept mapping. Health Place. 2013;23:9-17. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.2013.04.009
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.20...
. Based on these international experiences, interventions structure leaders, promote social participation for some groups, and build larger support networks, beneficial results which enable research to understand the logic of interventions and involved social groups.

However, we find it difficult to compare experiences from approaches us used in Europe and North America to those which interest since the former usually emerge from large projects to produce public-private urban spaces. According to Paquette 2020, what defines the most typical experiences in Latin American are processes of comprehensive, multipurpose, and heavily territorialized urban improvement2121.Paquette Vassalli C. Regeneración urbana: un panorama latinoamericano. Rev INVI. 2020;35(100):38-61. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-83582020000300038
https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-8358202000...
which are directly related to solving informal settlement problems and — in the case of Chile — to remedy the consequences of cities growing under spontaneous, informal urbanization to their outskirts and creating emergency social or subsidized housing projects which lacked a comprehensive view of individual and collective living, in which organized neighborhood communities and municipal mediation have driven a large part of the implemented improvements.

Our results show that the PMBQ has tried to strengthen neighborhood identity, driving direct actions toward it or following strategies to co-design interventions with community actors. However, it can also force actions which strengthen neighborhood individualization, fragmentation, or sectorization. This observation follows a previous evaluation of the PMBQ in twelve neighborhoods five years after its implementation2222.Centro de Desarrollo Urbano Sustentable (CL); Ministerio de Vivienda y Urbanismo (CL). Sustentabilidad a escala de barrio: re-visitando el Programa Quiero mi Barrio. Santiago de Chile: CEDEUS; 2019. which found a risk of fragmenting neighborhoods even further, as those urban projects were independently tackled and lacked public space networks (e.g., health, education, recycling, nutrition, among others).

In all studied cases, violence, crime, and vandalism emerge as latent elements causing fear, insecurity, and unrest at different levels according to each territorial context, an issue which studies in urban segregation in Chile2323.Brain I, Sabatini F. La segregación, los guetos y la integración social urbana: mitos y claves. Eure (Santiago). 2008;34(103):5-26. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0250-71612008000300001
https://doi.org/10.4067/S0250-7161200800...
had already underscored. It also finds itself in large-scale urban regeneration projects in Catalonia2424.Nel-lo O. The challenges of urban renewal. Ten lessons from the Catalan experience. Anal Soc. 2010;45(197):685-715. https://doi.org/10.2307/41012830
https://doi.org/10.2307/41012830...
Colombia2121.Paquette Vassalli C. Regeneración urbana: un panorama latinoamericano. Rev INVI. 2020;35(100):38-61. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-83582020000300038
https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-8358202000...
, Brazil2525.Idrovo Alvarado MD, Garcia-Almiral MP. Convivencia y seguridad: estrategias de intervención urbana en el espacio público de barrios segregados y en conflicto. Caso de estudio: Barrio la Mina. Archit City Environ. 2013;8(22):123-50. https://doi.org/10.5821/ace.vi22.2592
https://doi.org/10.5821/ace.vi22.2592...
, and Mexico2626.Ordóñez-Barba G, Alegría-Olazábal T, McIntosh C, Zenteno-Quintero R. Alcances e impactos del Programa Hábitat en comunidades pobres urbanas de México. Papeles Poblac. 2013;19(77):231-67., among others. Thus, the effects of a program that works from such a noticeable focus (which in principle may be necessary) can obscure the fact that other public policies are in motion or absent, giving rise to processes of care-desattention and neglect. Thus, spaces which more proactive aims regenerated begin to reflect the uncertainties and concerns of life (e.g., homeless groups, drug trafficking, etc.). Perceived insecurity and fear configure phenomena which are closely linked to anxiety and behaviors of avoidance or confinement, negatively affecting social interaction and physical activity2727.Lorenc T, Clayton S, Neary D, Whitehead M, Petticrew M, Thomson H, et al. Crime, fear of crime, environment, and mental health and wellbeing: mapping review of theories and causal pathways. Health Place. 2012;18(4):757-65. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.2012.04.001
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.20...
to the point that an urban regeneration program, even if it focuses on micro-communities, requires the action of other sectorial actors for comprehensive improvements. In health, this should foster an intersectional concept for such programs, a key issue to recognize the contributions and absences on all planes of the community life in neighborhoods2828.Cunill-Grau N. La intersectorialidad en las nuevas políticas sociales: un acercamiento analítico-conceptual. Gest Polit Publica. 2014;23(1):5-46..

In Chile, current health promotion programs incentivize the use of community spaces in neighborhoods2929.Ministerio de Salud (CL). Orientaciones técnicas municipios, comunas y comunidades saludables. Santiago de Chile; 2015., which is why coordination with other actors (such as those in primary care) is urgent and necessary. This study found actions promoting the spaces PQMB regenerated and the management it developed. Neighborhoods and house ownership assume a symbolic meaning of belonging (in addition to other factors conventional epidemiology has highlighted), associated with improvements on thermal comfort, noise reduction, and general satisfaction with home improvements, providing benefits for individuals’ overall, physical and mental health3030.Thomson H, Thomas S, Sellstrom E, Petticrew M. Housing improvements for health and associated socioeconomic outcomes. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013;(2):CD008657. https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD008657.pub2
https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD00865...
, an aspect which can acquire important nuances depending on the ecologies of national territories.

Youth’s lack of participation in social activities and older adults feature among program actions and the attention they paid to other global phenomena. National studies in health show that more active older adults adequately channels their free time and contributes to a better quality of life, especially in contact with peer groups3131.Zapata Farías H. Adulto mayor: participación e identidad. Rev Psicol. 2001;10(1):189-98. https://doi.org/10.5354/0719-0581.2001.18562
https://doi.org/10.5354/0719-0581.2001.1...
. We must consider that care tasks hinder their participation, an increasingly frequent phenomenon derived from parental difficulties within their working-class role in society, which demands balancing family life and work3232.Kelley SJ, Whitley DM, Escarra SR, Zheng R, Horne EM, Warren GL. The mental health well-being of grandparents raising grandchildren: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Marriage Fam Rev. 2021;57(4):329-45. https://doi.org/10.1080/01494929.2020.1861163
https://doi.org/10.1080/01494929.2020.18...
. This study found recurring references to older adults using spaces as they took care of their grandchildren in contrast to the lack of spaces for themselves, raising the need for working perspectives which include the individual and collective interests and developments in this predominant group within the projects regeneration of neighborhoods.

We found that the creation of sport spaces promotes younger groups’ practice and relaxation, positively affecting their physical and mental health3333.Organización Mundial de la Salud. Recomendaciones mundiales sobre actividad física para la salud. Ginebra: OMS; 2010.. This study evinces that these interventions influence the emergence of these conditions. However, the studied neighborhoods show no new sport groups, rather, recurrent user groups deemed that the conditions for their activities had improved. On the other hand, the strong PQMB direction to enable spaces for children’s sports and recreation ignores other, woman youth or teen mothers’ interests for whom these spaces, although valued, are yet to be deemed as spaces which might attract users. This represents an opportunity for the program to consider different needs and experiences within neighborhoods.

Among our limitations, we failed to find groups who had organized themselves around an experience continuum, only attesting to actors who already were participants and familiar with certain neighborhood changes. Thus, key informants predominate in this study. We were also unable to further develop research with more focus groups in some neighborhoods since researchers felt endangered by doing so, requiring a greater number of individual interviews.

The strengths of this study include assessing collective health and well-being to address urban regeneration as a local scenario requiring public health perspectives. Our sample also highlights the participation of various geographic areas and relatively recent experiences. Given the evidence this study has provided and considering the guidelines of the SDH approach, primary care and local community team actions represent an opportunity to both design and implement the PQMB.

CONCLUSIONS

Locals perceived that the urban changes arising from the PQMB improved the infrastructure and psychosocial surroundings of several neighborhoods. Participants deemed these beneficial changes as promoting collective well-being, listing its socialization and walkability spaces, support networks, lighting, cleanliness, and public security the main contributions of the program. Nevertheless, they perceive global phenomena as associated with insecurity, inequity, aging, and new lifestyles, in addition to the aspects the program overlooked, which limit its reach and affect locals’ perception of well-being. Within the SDH approach we adopted, i.e., spheres of direct effect, the structural aspect represents a public policy, operationalized via the PQMB, which has the possibilities and opportunities of receiving praise for its benefits, coverage, and methods of implementation. These mechanisms require further development to analyze the temporality of the interventions and, above all, highlight the importance of planning and intersectoral work to pursue comprehensive actions in urban spaces.

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    Borrell C, Malmusi D, Artazcoz L, Diez E, Pasarín MI, Rodríguez-Sanz M, et al. Las desigualdades sociales en salud en España. Gac Sanit. 2012;26(2):182-9. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gaceta.2011.07.024
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    Valles MS. Técnicas cualitaticas de investigação social: reflexión metodológica y práctica professional. Madrid (ES): Editorial Síntesis; 1999.
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    Pérez-Serrano G. Investigación cualitativa: retos e interrogantes. Tomo II: Técnicas de análisis de datos. Madrid (ES): La Muralla; 2002.
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    Rodríguez A, Sugranyes A. Los con techo: un desafio para la política de vivienda social. Santiago de Chile: Ediciones SUR; 2005.
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    Araya R, Montgomery A, Rojas G, Fritsch R, Solis J, Signorelli A, et al. Common mental disorders and the built environment in Santiago, Chile. Br J Psychiatry. 2007;190:394-401. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.bp.106.024596
    » https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.bp.106.024596
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  • Funding: National Agency for Research and Development (ANID)/CONICYT-FONIS SA16I0291.

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    14 Apr 2023
  • Date of issue
    2023

History

  • Received
    30 Sept 2021
  • Accepted
    25 Apr 2022
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