INHERIT

INHERIT
– Identifying ways of living, moving and consuming that protect the environment and promote health and health equity.

Go to INHERIT.eu (project home page)
INHERIT (INter-sectoral Health and Environment Research for InnovaTion) is about stimulating effective policies, practices and innovations that address key environmental stressors of health and the underlying causes of health inequity.
This Horizon 2020 research project aims to encourage us to modify our current lifestyles, characterized by a ‘take, make, consume, dispose’ models of growth, to formulate scenarios for a more sustainable future, and to design, implement and test inter-sectoral initiatives to achieve the desired change.
Duration
INHERIT is a 48-month / 4-year (2016-2019) Horizon 2020 project funded by the European Commission
Consortium
INHERIT consists of 18 partners from around Europe led by EuroHealthNet.
See more details here: Consortium Partners
Project participants and work package lead WP-4 Implementation - NTNU
- Monica Lillefjell
- Kirsti Sarheim Anthun
- Geir Arild Espnes
- Ruca Maass
- Siren Hope
- Camilla Nguyen
- Turid Fånes Sætermo
Research groups linked to the project
Contact
Project publications by NTNU research group
- Stegeman, Ingrid; Godfrey, Alba; Romeo-Velilla, Maria; Bell, Ruth; Staatsen, Brigit; van der Vliet, Nina; Kruize, Hanneke; Morris, George; Taylor, Timothy; Strube, Rosa; Anthun, Kirsti Sarheim; Lillefjell, Monica; Zvěřinová, Iva; Ščasný, Milan; Máca, Vojtech; Costongs, Caroline (2020) Encouraging and enabling lifestyles and behaviours to simultaneously promote environmental sustainability, health and equity: Key policy messages from inherit. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (IJERPH)
- Bell, Ruth; Khan, Matluba; Romeo-Velilla, Maria; Stegeman, Ingrid; Godfrey, Alba; Taylor, Timothy; Morris, George A.; Staatsen, Brigit; van der Vliet, Nina; Kruize, Hanneke; Anthun, Kirsti Sarheim; Lillefjell, Monica; Espnes, Geir Arild; Chiabai, Aline; García de Jalón, Silvestre; Quiroga, Sonia et al. (2019) Ten lessons for good practice for the INHERIT triple win: Health, equity, and environmental sustainability. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (IJERPH)
- Anthun, Kirsti Sarheim; Maass, Ruca Elisa Katrin; Hope, Siren; Espnes, Geir Arild; Bell, Ruth; Khan, Matluba; Lillefjell, Monica. (2019) Addressing Inequity: Evaluation of an Intervention to Improve Accessability and Quality of a Green Space. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (IJERPH)
Reports
- Implementing Triple-Win Case Studies for Living, Moving and Consuming that Encourage Behavioural Change, Protect the Environment, and Promote Health and Health Equity. Kirsti Sarheim Anthun, Monica Lillefjell, Geir Arild Espnes, Siren Hope, Ruca Elisa Katrin Maass, Camilla Nguyen, Turid Fånes Sætermo (Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NO), George Morris (University of Exeter, UK)
- Cost Benefit analyses of four INHERIT case studies. Silvestre García de Jalón , Aline Chiabai , Tim Taylor , Sonia Quiroga , Cristina Suarez , Naiara Artaza , Tamara Blas , Amaya de Ayala , Pablo Martínez , Cecilia Latorre , Monica Lillefjell , Kirsti Sarheim Anthun
- Implementing Triple-Win Case Studies for Living, Moving and Consuming that Encourage Behavioural Change, Protect the Environment, and Promote Health and Health Equity - INHERIT
- Quantitative-and-Qualitative-Evaluations-of-Impacts-and-Benefits-Case-Studies Malvik Path: Monica Lillefjell, Kirsti Sarheim Anthun, Ruca Elisa Katrin Maass, Siren Hope, Geir Arild Espnes, (Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NO), Bettina Friedrich, Matluba Khan, Ruth Bell, (University College London, Institute of Health Equity, UK
- Creating Triple-Wins for Health, Equity and Environmental Sustainability: Elements of Good Practice Based on Learning from the INHERIT Case Studies. Ruth Bell, Matluba Khan (University College London, Institute of Health Equity, UK), Maria Romeo-Velilla, Ingrid Stegeman, Alba Godfrey, Caroline Costongs (EuroHealthNet, BE), Timothy Taylor, George Morris (University of Exeter, UK), Brigit Staatsen, Nina van der Vliet, Hanneke Kruize (National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, NL), Kirsti Sarheim Anthun, Monica Lillefjell, Geir Arild Espnes (Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NO) et al.
