The HIA Threshold Analysis workbook is a more detailed spreadsheet-based assessment that focuses on proven health thresholds and associations related to topics of concern to urban planners. This sets it apart from both HIAs dealing with general health and social issues and from HIAs oriented toward planners but including a long list of possible issues including those for which no conclusive research on health effects exists.
This DFH threshold workbook is a score based system not unlike others used in planning and urban development such as LEED for Neighborhood Development (LEED-ND) and LEED for New Construction (LEEDNC) ratings systems. It is designed to be shorter and simpler to use than many of these, however, and its focus is human health rather than the natural environment. The spreadsheet itself is easy to fill in and provides specific guidance about information that is needed. However, assembling the information could well take some days and even weeks.
Resources:
Participation and Planning for Health: How can the public participate in planning for health? Which Design for Health tools can be used in participation processes or modified for such use? This fact sheet deals with these two issues in turn.
LEED for New Construction (LEED-NC)
LEED for New Construction and Major Renovations is a green building rating system that was designed to guide and distinguish high-performance commercial and institutional projects, with a focus on office buildings. Practitioners have also applied the system to K-12 schools, multi-unit residential buildings, manufacturing plants, laboratories and many other building types.
Health Data: This section provides tools on how to access information about health within your community as well on how to measure the effects that the built environment has on certain health issues.
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