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  1. The Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion. The first International Conference on Health Promotion, meeting in Ottawa this 21st day of November 1986, hereby presents this CHARTER for action to achieve Health for All by the year 2000 and beyond.

  2. Jun 16, 2012 · Overview. More than 200 participants from 38 countries met in November 1986 in Ottawa to exchange experiences and share knowledge of health promotion. The conference stimulated an open dialogue among health workers. politicians, academics and representatives of governmental. voluntary and community organizations.

  3. The Ottawa Charter is a document that presents the principles and strategies for health promotion, adopted by the first International Conference on Health Promotion in 1986. It emphasizes the need for action by all sectors and levels to create healthy public policy, environments, communities, and individuals.

  4. Mar 25, 2024 · The basic strategies for health promotion identified in the Ottawa Charter were: advocate (to boost the factors which encourage health), enable (allowing all people to achieve health equity) and mediate (through collaboration across all sectors).

  5. The Ottawa Charter is an international agreement signed in 1986 by the WHO and other organizations to promote health for all by 2000 and beyond. It identifies five action areas, four prerequisites, and two strategies for health promotion, and provides a historical context and developments.

  6. A document from the first International Conference on Health Promotion in 1986, presenting a charter for action to achieve Health for All by the year 2000 and beyond. The charter outlines five key concepts for health promotion: strengthening community action, creating supportive environments, developing personal skills, reorienting health services, and building healthy public policies.

  7. Mar 31, 2016 · The Ottawa Charter is a visionary document for the international health promotion movement, published in 1986 after a WHO conference. It advocates for a broader social model of health, based on five principles: advocacy, policy, environment, community, and services.