Skip to main content
Main navigation
Home
Resource Exchange Library
Curated Guidance
Curated Guidance
Explaining the Curated Guidance
Air Quality Monitoring
Source Attribution
Emissions Inventory
Health Impact Assessment
Sustainable Development Benefits Assessment
Decision Support
Public Engagement and Communication
Legal Framework, Policy Design and Implementation
Why Take Action
Get Involved
About
English
Language
Sort: item-selected
Sort:
Newest to Oldest
Oldest to Newest
Alphabetically, A-Z
Alphabetically, Z-A
Relevance
Breadcrumb
Home
Resource Exchange Library
The Health Impact Assessment (HIA) Resource and Tool Compilation: A Comprehensive Toolkit for New and Experienced HIA Practitioners in the U.S.
The Health Impact Assessment (HIA) Resource and Tool Compilation: A Comprehensive Toolkit for New and Experienced HIA Practitioners in the U.S.
Share
SHARE
Facebook share
Twitter
LinkedIn
Copy URL
Email
Download
Year of Publishing
2016
Organisation
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Tags
Language
English
AQM Activity Type
Health Impact Assessment
Resource type
Guidelines, Tools & Models
Regions
North America
Global
Location
United States of America
Governance level
All levels
Description
An inventory of available HIA resources and tools was conducted, with a primary focus on resources developed in the U.S. The resources and tools available to HIA practitioners in the conduct of their work were identified through multiple methods and compiled into a comprehensive list. The compilation includes tools and resources related to the HIA process itself and those that can be used to collect and analyze data, establish a baseline profile, assess potential health impacts, and establish benchmarks and indicators for monitoring and evaluation. These resources include literature and evidence bases, data and statistics, guidelines, benchmarks, decision and economic analysis tools, scientific models, methods, frameworks, indices, mapping, and various data collection tools. Understanding the data, tools, models, methods, and other resources available to perform HIAs will help to advance the HIA community of practice in the U.S., improve the quality and rigor of assessments upon which stakeholder and policy decisions are based, and potentially improve the overall effectiveness of HIA to promote healthy and sustainable communities