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Posts Tagged ‘health’


Navigating intelligence allows us to scan the environment and make decisions about our course corrections using Integral Vital Signs Monitors (IVSM). An IVSM is a reporting system whose design is based on an integral framework. It utilizes life-sustaining indicators and communicates its results in a universal language.

An IVSM system mines existing databases, gathers new data and reports observations in a global graphic language that is accessible to all (in multiple versions and multiple translations). Its purpose is for providing life-giving data for making decisions that develop, maintain and emerge the health of local and global systems of interest, for the current generations and the generations to come.

IVSM’s can exist on any scale of the human system, and are designed so that they can scale up and down from the individual to the planet.

Navigating intelligence develops a vital signs monitor with indicators and benchmarks that recognize :

  • climate systems that affect natural and human sustainability (eg. rainfall, water tables)
  • the limits of carrying capacity for the basic resources of air, land and water
  • bio-psycho-cultural-social health indicators for individuals, families, workplaces, neighborhoods, and city systems
  • sustainable economies
  • sustainable infrastructures for transportation, health, education and commercial development
  • congruent and incongruent neighbours that affect the health of the natural and human systems (eg. air shed, water quality, transportation systems, human movement,communicable diseases, etc. )
  • physical, psychological, cultural and social boundaries

Navigating intelligence that uses IVSM adds value in four ways:

  1. The essential design elements of the IVSM provide a framework, indicator organizer and common language to communicate results across cultures. We can see the investment of resources that we have made in each quadrant and level; ie. we can track energy, matter and information.
  2. We can translate the investments into terms of traditional financial management; strategic financial investment; density of social networks; or sustainability vectors such as carbon-based resources (or all).
  3. By the use of hyper linking, we can see the linkage between realities (four quadrants); levels of complexity (eight plus levels); time (development/evolution); and scale.
  4. It allows us to compare results internally within urban systems and externally between urban systems.

From an Integral Vital Signs Monitor is designed, the Integral Scorecard can become the reporting vehicle for informing all the stakeholders of the city. It tells us whether we are achieving the purpose and objectives of the city in a sustainable way. It reveals to us if we are amassing the energy, matter and information that we need to sustain ourselves. It is a way of mapping capacity and potential and has the power to reveal imbalances that indicate unsustainable practices.

Navigating intelligence using IVSM works hand in hand with Meshworking intelligence to design new governance systems that research, plan and manage the city.

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This blog is a prologue to the Integral City webinar conference  City 2.0 Co-Creating the Future of the Human Hive . We are inventing a new operating system for the city.  Click to get more details re the Free Expo and eLaboratory membership  scheduled September 4-27  2012. You are invited to attend and participate.

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Navigating intelligence monitors and discloses the wellbeing or general condition of the city.

Many city information officers are now developing versions of vital signs monitor for monitoring and reporting the health of the city. From an eco-regional perspective the indicators should track what Jared Diamond noted every society must pay attention to for long-term survival:

  • Climate change
  • Environmental health of the eco-region
  • The city’s responses to environmental problems
  • Positive economic relationships with other cities and/or eco-regions
  • Incongruent neighbouring cities and/or eco-regions

Vital Signs Monitors become Integrally (IVSM) framed when they serve as community indices to measure the quality of overall health and wellbeing.  This becomes owned by the whole community when community partners (like the education institutions, health care systems, justice system, economy, recreation facilities, city hall)  contribute core data so that a composite picture of the whole community emerges from the integral map.

As a result, each community partner has a stake in the success of the IVSM and together the community of partners gains insights how their interconnections contribute to the wellbeing of the whole city.

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This blog is a prologue to the Integral City webinar conference  City 2.0 Co-Creating the Future of the Human Hive . We are inventing a new operating system for the city.  Click to get more details re the Free Expo and eLaboratory membership  scheduled September 4-27  2012. You are invited to attend and participate.

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Inquiry is so much more productive for the wellbeing of the city, than prescriptions for health, because it opens the doors of innovation and generativity.

For a truly vibrant city, each inquiry question reveals a whole system of values all of which must be healthy, in order for the whole city to be healthy.

The eight value systems that have currently evolved are represented in these themes:

  1. Individual safety and survival
  2. Bonding, family relationships, clan and tribal customs
  3. Individual expressiveness, joy, personal power
  4. Order, authority, rules, laws, bylaws, ordinances, infrastructure
  5. Organization, efficiency, effectiveness, strategies, results
  6. Community, diversity, acceptance of differences, equal rights
  7. Whole systems thinking, ecological connections
  8. Global worldviews, shared world emergence

The deficiencies and blocks identified in an inquiry indicate the barriers to the natural flow of resources to, within and through a healthy human hive. In our quest for city improvement, how can we overcome the causes of such blocks and recreate the vibrant health that sustain our city?

One of the most powerful outcomes of using this values mapping inquiry process is that it creates a common language to interpret and talk about our Human Hives. And we learn that we can have many answers to one question.

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This blog is a prologue to the Integral City webinar conference  City 2.0 Co-Creating the Future of the Human Hive . We are inventing a new operating system for the city.  Click to get more details re the Free Expo and eLaboratory membership  scheduled September 4-27  2012. You are invited to attend and participate.

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Health emerges because the structures we have created sustain us through relatively stable times and life conditions. When these structures have built-in flexibility they are also resilient and create the conditions for an energetic city.

This means that my bio-physical self can respond to the changes in my environment and access to energy, including other people in it. Thus the cycles of that affect me as a living system – accessing resources for nourishment, sustaining life through connecting with my environment and reproducing the evolutionary impulse of our species – continue to occur despite the challenges of change that surround me.

The complex adaptive capacities of my genes, brain and body are the amazing legacy of all my relations who have gone before me. Developing a healthy body/brain can be considered my responsibility to contribute to a healthy city.  Such personal practise on energy management is an act of leadership, modelling an organic paradigm of health that contributes to resilient healthcare systems, in service to the whole population of the city.

Three simple rules for practising Integral City Outer Intelligences for a fully energized city are:

  • Manage personal energy.
  • Seek bio-physical wellbeing for self and others.
  • Nurture healthy leaders.

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This blog is a prologue to the Integral City webinar conference  City 2.0 Co-Creating the Future of the Human Hive . We are inventing a new operating system for the city.  Click to get more details re the Free Expo and eLaboratory membership  scheduled September 4-27  2012. You are invited to attend and participate.

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The four quadrant perspectival map of reality (bio-psycho-cultural-social) can be shape-shifted into a nested holarchy of city holons.

This scalar fractal map shows the relationship amongst the micro, meso and macro human systems at multiple levels of scale from the individual to the family/group, organization, sector, community, city, eco-region and the world. Integral intelligence looks at the city, as a whole system, in the context of its eco-region. So we can see cities in their natural environment (whether that be mountain, sea, prairie, desert, lakeland or any of the other 12 geographies of the world). As Jared Diamond reminds us, human systems must pay attention to their climate, geography and natural ecology in order to make sustainable decisions for survival and connecting with other cities in economic, social, cultural or environmental exchange.

Cities must also develop resilience against attacks from internal invaders (like conflicting values systems) and external predators (like hostile economies that extract financial, human or natural resources without replacing them in a reciprocal exchange). An Integral City is dynamic, adaptive and responsive to both its internal life conditions and external life conditions. The holarchy of nested human systems can be used as mindfulness lenses to help us differentiate perspectives that remind us about different views and different scales. They show us another way that the fractal and holonic existences of human systems and sub-systems interact with one another. When the holarchical map is combined with the four quadrant Integral map of the city, they offer a new organizing principle to interpret information from Global Information Systems (GIS) maps.

An Integral City goes beyond the sustainability of the human systems which it contains and actually adds value to the bio-region in which it is located and/or to the bio-regions to which it is connected. Ultimately this means that an Integral City would be governed by its capacity to develop, maintain and regenerate life-giving resources. Such a city’s health would be measured in the context of the bio-region’s health and the planet’s health.

The Integral maps give us insight into the vibrancy of wholeness of the city and help us to detect when that wholeness is  disconnected and out of synch. They help us understand how the city as a whole functions internally, while seeing the commonalities in the patterns of human systems that link them externally to other cities facing the same affronts to their integralness and thus their capacity for integration and integrity. This map gives us a way to live into the maxim (oft repeated by Meg Wheatley): “If you want to improve the health of a system, connect it to more of itself”.

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This blog is a prologue to the Integral City webinar conference  City 2.0 Co-Creating the Future of the Human Hive . We are inventing a new operating system for the city.  Click to get more details re the Free Expo and eLaboratory membership  scheduled September 4-27  2012. You are invited to attend and participate.

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As the city becomes more complex individuals, organizations, and community systems interconnect and interplay. Life and death and the health of the city are very much reflected in healthy alignment of the many systems that make up the whole city system (or holarchy).

These different scales of city systems co-exist at different stages of their life cycles - new teams are in formative stages like babies, other associations are shifting into their youth, some organizations act like mature adults and yet other sectors carry the weight of elders. We are all members of these many systems simultaneously.  Our city feels alive and thriving when we can learn in constructive ways across the generational lifescapes.

The quality of life in the micro (individual) reflects the quality of life at the meso (teams and organizations) and the macro (communities and city) and vice versa. All these whole systems (holons) must be in service to both self and others and place. That is the essence of a healthy life in a healthy living city.

Evolution biologist, Elisabeth Sahtouris offers 15 Principles of Healthy Living Systems which informed both Integral City intelligences and Integral City Book Chapters [as noted in square brackets] provide powerful guidance for the healthy Human Hive.

Elisabet’s Principles of Living Systems are these:

1. Self-creation or autopoiesis [eco-emergence-living]

2. Complexity or diversity of parts [eco-emergence]

3. Embeddedness in larger holons and dependence on the holarchy  [integral, living]

4. Self reflexivity or autognosis and self-knowledge [integral, Chapters 6 and 8]

5. Self regulation/maintenance or autonomics, balancing efficiency and resilience [integral,

living]

6. Response-ability to internal and external stress or change [integral Chapters 5 to 8]

7. Input/output of matter, energy and information with other holons [living, Chapters 5 and 7]

8. Transformation of matter, energy and information; no non-recyclable waste [ living Chapter

5, 7]

9. Communications among all parts [integral, Chapters 10,11,12]

10. Empowerment, full employment of all component parts [meshworking]

11. Coordination of parts and functions [meshworking]

12. Balance of interests negotiated among parts, whole and embedding holarchy [living]

13. Reciprocity of parts in mutual contribution and assistance [living]

14. Conservation of what works well [integral]

15. Innovation, creative change of what does not work well [inquiry]

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Listen to Elisabet Sahtouris at the upcoming eLaboratory.

This blog is a prologue to the Integral City webinar conference  City 2.0 Co-Creating the Future of the Human Hive . We are inventing a new operating system for the city.  Click to get more details re the Free Expo and eLaboratory membership  scheduled September 4-27  2012. You are invited to attend and participate.

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Designing healthcare systems that serve the wellbeing of Integral City 2.0 begins with remembering “health” comes from the same root as the word “whole”. Healthcare in the human hive is based on the principles of Life and Evolution .

Wholistic healthcare systems are rooted in natural science and embody values and cultural intentions.  Principles that contribute to appropriate healthcare systems include:

  • Aligning the purpose of healthcare systems with the vision and purpose of the city
  • Understanding how citizens define health – recognizing the multiple definitions that connect to food, energy, information and spirit
  • Integrating, educating and supporting a variety of healthcare modalities to match citizen preferences
  • Designing healthcare from a systems-thinking perspective for optimizing flex and flow of city and citi-zen resourcefulness
  • Understanding demographics of the city so healthcare design serves the lifecycles of the citi-zens
  • Embracing the wholistic realities of the bio-psycho-cultural-structural health needs of the city
  • Mapping existing health facilities and human resources to improve access and grow capacity to serve across the whole city
  • Considering the spectrum of cultural sub-populations and their specialized needs based on life practices
  • Benchmarking healthcare with vital signs monitors to track and improve wellbeing measures
  • Adapting healthcare to the life conditions of the city in all kinds of “change weather” – stable, troubled, turbulent or promising

Most of the major cities of the world are now melting pots of East and West. As such our healthcare systems can learn from the intelligences and wisdoms across the spectrum of major healthcare traditions. Wellbeing in the city demands that we pay attention to how we value and manage the patterns, processes and structures of our city as a living system – the human hive.

Reference

Hamilton, M. (2008). Integral City: Evolutionary Intelligences for the Human Hive. Gabriola Island BC: New Society Publishers. Chapter 6

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Who #occupies the Voice of the Civic Manager?  When everyone else is speaking at #occupy city square, who’s ears are occupied by the Civic Manager’s words? The voice of the Civic Manager speaks for senior leaders in city hall, the healthcare system, the justice system, the school system, and the library system. The Civic Manager calls forth conditions for the Integral City to run effectively across all sectors. The voice calls for civic order and safety. Sometimes it sounds as systematic as an air traffic controller, others as logical as an engineer and yet others as strategic as a designer. The voice of the Civic Manager is trained to coordinate the orchestra of city planning, engineering, economic development, transportation, waste and water management, energy distribution, street maintenance, cultural and social planning, emergency and medical services, animal/human interface management and ecological/sustainability strategy. The voice of the Civic Manager recites building standards, maintenance schedules, official agendas and town hall calendars. The Civic Manager’s voice persuades responsibility and accountability across multiple disciplines, sectors and stakeholders.

Occupy the Voice of the Civic Manager and you may be speechless when senior governments downsize and off-load, wondering how to deliver increasing results with declining resources. At the same time the Voice of the Civic Manager occupies a ferris-wheel of accelerating change as city populations have become Global Villages.

Often caught between the opposing expectations of citizens and senior politicos, the Voice of the Civic Manager transposes more keys, translates more lyrics and spans more octaves than any other voice in the Integral City .

The Voice of the Civic Manager occupies the channels we depend on for our daily existence in the Integral City.

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Further to my interview with Will Varey in Perth about emergence in the city (also see Blog) we talked about the dilemma that in one location we have multiple cities. Effectively each citizen carries around a unique mental model of the city and through the magic of self-organizing systems we negotiate this complex territory.

The implications of multiple cities is astounding. It not only means that we have to reconcile many perspectives on how to share our one location, but how do we reconcile many perspectives about what constitutes health and wellbeing? While health care ministries across the world struggle to administer health standards, what most of them have not yet seen is that in one city we have many healths.

Many healths? What does that mean? It means that certainly every culture develops norms about what constitutes health and wellbeing. It is a central tenet around which cultures function because it is critical to their very survival. In the time before globalization (remember that not so very long ago??) these differing views of health were essentially contained in the geographies where those cultures were situated.

But in our modern cities, all the cultures of the world co-exist. And so we are faced with the relatively new phenomenon of one city and many healths. This is quite a challenge to whatever dominant culture has set out the standards and boundaries of any underlying health system. Take for example what we are most familiar with in North America. Our health systems are generally defined by the Euro-centric allopathic view of acute health care. In most North American health systems the defenders of that view of health tend to vociferously ward off influences from other views and practices of health – what is popularly called “alternative health” practices. But in other parts of the world those health practices may be the norm (including practices like acupuncture, homeopathy, herbalism, energy healing, ayurveda, plus many more). So in the modern city we have a clash of healths.

This clash of healths is real not virtual because it embraces the privileges of power, the allocation of funding and resources, the training of people and the management of health facilities. This reality calls forth a different approach than trying to merely prove one health practice better than another. It calls forth an integral view where each health can be considered true but partial. That is each health brings something different to the health table.

Moreover each health might offer a distinctly appropriate modality of healing to any given individual because it is appropriate to the person, their culture, their life conditions and their developmental level. Because the healths that any individual might respond to can even change over a life time and can certainly change depending on a person’s geographic and life situation – for example health that is related to family relationships and belonging may be the most appropriate healing modality for someone who is exhibiting symptoms that an allopathic system fails to treat with drugs and surgery.

What does this all mean for any given city of today? It means that every modern city needs multiple views of health and multiple healing modalities to maintain these healths. Just as Singapore with its four major belief systems offers multiple days of faith-based holidays, cities need to offer health systems that offer multiple ways to practise health to all the key cultural nodes in their boundaries. Far from being too expensive a practice to pursue, such an approach to health can be immediately more effective because it is matching the right resource(s) to the right health situation(s).

This kind of approach to multiple healths would essentially create a health meshwork which would support the multiple healths for individuals within those key cultures. And moreover a health system that offered this would then create the foundation for the many healths to learn (more)  from each other. No doubt, in the trajectory of meshworks, this would lead to new discoveries, innovations and more advanced health and wellbeing systems.

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I just finished a final edit on the last Imagine Abbotsford Dialogue — to be reported in The Abbotsford News May 14, 2009.

This dialogue was on the Health and Community of Abbotsford. One Policy Maker from the Fraser Valley Health Authority remarked that the community gains greater health benefits by investing in kids than in any other demographic of the community. The payback is enormous — for every dollar invested in kids, the community saves four dollars in the future. That is an huge return on investment.

Where do the dollars invested in childhood development largely get spent? In the education system (not the health care system) — but the paybacks are in the whole community system.

David Brooks talks about the Harlem Miracle today, outlining the story of Geoffrey Canada in Harlem and his Promise Academy in the Harlem Children’s Zone. The results of Canada’s school performance have so impressed researchers using rigorous evaluation templates, that they have changed their minds about the intractability of Harlem’s school and social problems.

Brooks points out the fierce standards that Canada demands of his students and his teachers. And he makes no bones about the value of teaching his students middle class values that include mutual respect, impulse control, self-discipline and hard work. His black students have closed the black-white performance gap that exists in most of the other New York schools — proving that the gap is not impervious to change.

The comments following Brooks article reveal that Promise Academy admits students by lottery (not selection) so they are accepting all comers. Further, the charter school provides support for the kids before and after school AND addresses the competencies of their parents, by offering them parenting classes.

Sounds like two streams of research — one in healthcare and one in education — are proving that one of the most intelligent investments city’s can make is in their children. Not surprising!! The bees figures that out millions of generations ago.

btw, seems like Promise Academy has created a very integral solution that integrates structural, cultural, intentional and behavioral aspects to create life conditions for educating kids. Don Beck points out that it is an elegant meshwork approach!!

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