Behavioural and structural interventions in cancer prevention: towards the 2030 SDG horizon

Traditionally, the prevention of cancer (and other chronic diseases) has been considered primarily linked to personal responsibility, for which interventions must be based on health education information enabling individuals to make knowledge‐based decisions to improve their lifestyle. However, life...

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Main Authors: Jose M. Martin‐Moreno, Natalia Ruiz‐Segovia, Eduardo Diaz‐Rubio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-03-01
Series:Molecular Oncology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.12805
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spelling doaj-f273c5486b4f4a71aca7544ddb2c7d022021-03-04T10:18:45ZengWileyMolecular Oncology1574-78911878-02612021-03-0115380180810.1002/1878-0261.12805Behavioural and structural interventions in cancer prevention: towards the 2030 SDG horizonJose M. Martin‐Moreno0Natalia Ruiz‐Segovia1Eduardo Diaz‐Rubio2Department of Preventive Medicine & INCLIVA University of Valencia SpainDepartment of Prevention and Health Promotion Asociacion Española Contra el Cancer Madrid SpainServicio Oncologia Medica Hospital Clinico San Carlos Madrid SpainTraditionally, the prevention of cancer (and other chronic diseases) has been considered primarily linked to personal responsibility, for which interventions must be based on health education information enabling individuals to make knowledge‐based decisions to improve their lifestyle. However, lifestyle is conditioned by environmental factors (including dimensions such as the context of economics, transport, urbanism, agriculture or education) that may render healthy behavioural choices either easier or, alternatively, impossible. This article reviews the conceptual underpinnings of the behavioural‐structural dichotomy. We believe that it is advisable to opt for multilevel strategies that take into account all the determinants of health, using structural and behavioural approaches, rather than only the latter, as has been done until now.https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.12805Agenda 2030behavioural interventionscancer preventionhealth in all policieshealth promotionnoncommunicable disease prevention
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jose M. Martin‐Moreno
Natalia Ruiz‐Segovia
Eduardo Diaz‐Rubio
spellingShingle Jose M. Martin‐Moreno
Natalia Ruiz‐Segovia
Eduardo Diaz‐Rubio
Behavioural and structural interventions in cancer prevention: towards the 2030 SDG horizon
Molecular Oncology
Agenda 2030
behavioural interventions
cancer prevention
health in all policies
health promotion
noncommunicable disease prevention
author_facet Jose M. Martin‐Moreno
Natalia Ruiz‐Segovia
Eduardo Diaz‐Rubio
author_sort Jose M. Martin‐Moreno
title Behavioural and structural interventions in cancer prevention: towards the 2030 SDG horizon
title_short Behavioural and structural interventions in cancer prevention: towards the 2030 SDG horizon
title_full Behavioural and structural interventions in cancer prevention: towards the 2030 SDG horizon
title_fullStr Behavioural and structural interventions in cancer prevention: towards the 2030 SDG horizon
title_full_unstemmed Behavioural and structural interventions in cancer prevention: towards the 2030 SDG horizon
title_sort behavioural and structural interventions in cancer prevention: towards the 2030 sdg horizon
publisher Wiley
series Molecular Oncology
issn 1574-7891
1878-0261
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Traditionally, the prevention of cancer (and other chronic diseases) has been considered primarily linked to personal responsibility, for which interventions must be based on health education information enabling individuals to make knowledge‐based decisions to improve their lifestyle. However, lifestyle is conditioned by environmental factors (including dimensions such as the context of economics, transport, urbanism, agriculture or education) that may render healthy behavioural choices either easier or, alternatively, impossible. This article reviews the conceptual underpinnings of the behavioural‐structural dichotomy. We believe that it is advisable to opt for multilevel strategies that take into account all the determinants of health, using structural and behavioural approaches, rather than only the latter, as has been done until now.
topic Agenda 2030
behavioural interventions
cancer prevention
health in all policies
health promotion
noncommunicable disease prevention
url https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.12805
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