Abstract

Since Aaron Antonovsky’s salutogenesis theory and Morgan and Ziglio’s health assets model were first proposed, there has been a growing concern to define the resources available to the individual and the community to maintain or improve health and well-being. The aim of the present study was to identify the dimensions that characterise community assets for health. To this end, we conducted a systematised review with a meta-synthesis and content analysis of research or projects involving asset mapping in the community. Articles that met our eligibility criteria were: (1) based on the salutogenic approach and (2) described an assets mapping process and among their results, explained what, how and why particular community assets for health had been selected. The search included primary studies in the published and grey literature which were selected from websites and electronic databases (Web of Science, MEDLINE, Scopus, EBSCOhost, Dialnet, SciELO). Of the 607 records examined by a single reviewer, 34 were included in the content analysis and 14 in the qualitative synthesis. Using an inductive process, we identified 14 dimensions with 24 categories, for which in-depth literature reviews were then carried out to define specific indicators and items. These dimensions were: utility, intention, previous use, accessibility (“circumstances–opportunity–affordability”), proximity-walkability, connectivity, intelligibility (visibility, transparency), identity (uniqueness, appropriability, attachment), design (configuration, functionality, comfort), safety (objective/subjective), diversity, the dimension of public and private, and sustainability (which includes maintenance, profitability or economic sustainability, environmental sustainability, centrality-participation and equity-inclusiveness).

Highlights

  • Our study demonstrates the paucity of research aimed at identifying the characteristics of health assets or determining the reasons why one asset or another is identified in the mapping process

  • The dimensions identified by means of our systematised review were accompanied by in-depth, cross-disciplinary reviews of these concepts that enabled us to specify particular indicators or appropriate items for each of them

  • Our proposal links Aaron Antonov sky’s salutogenic orientation with the health asset mapping approach, itself grounded in basic human needs and dimensions related to design, diversity, sustainability and other determinants

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Summary

Introduction

Numerous authors in the fields of psychology and the social sciences have attempted to define the resources available to the individual and the community to maintain or improve health and well-being. These have included Aaron Antonovsky, whose theory of salutogenesis defines the Sense of Coherence and General Resilience Resources (GRRs) [1,2], and Kretzmann and McKnight [3], whose Asset Based Community Development (ABCD). “salutogenic umbrella” covers many of the concepts and theories that share a positive approach to explaining people’s health and quality of life, in contrast to the traditional.

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