Comparisons of healthcare personnel relating to awareness, concern, motivation, and behaviours of climate and health: A cross‐sectional study

Author:

Rangel Teresa1ORCID,Johnson Sarah E.2ORCID,Joubert Patricia3,Timmerman Rosemary4,Smith Stephan5,Springer Gale6,Schenk Elizabeth78

Affiliation:

1. Providence Central Division Spokane Washington USA

2. Providence St. Patrick Hospital Missoula Montana USA

3. Providence Saint John's Health Center Santa Monica California USA

4. Providence Alaska Medical Center Anchorage Alaska USA

5. Covenant Medical Center Lubbock Texas USA

6. Providence Regional Medical Center Everett Everett Washington USA

7. Providence Renton Washington USA

8. Washington State University Spokane Washington USA

Abstract

AbstractAim(s)To describe a sample of healthcare professionals' responses to the valid and reliable Climate and Health Tool and compare participant characteristics relating to Climate and Health Tool subscales.DesignObservational, cross‐sectional, multi‐site study.MethodsAn electronic survey containing the Climate and Health Tool was administered to healthcare professionals across a large, multi‐state health system in the Western United States with a committed effort to reducing carbon emissions.ResultsOne thousand three hundred and sixty‐three participants reported moderately elevated levels of awareness and concern around climate impacts on health and motivation to participate in climate protective actions. Respondents reported moderate levels of climate‐protecting behaviours at home and low levels at work. Females were more concerned and motivated. Medical staff and respondents reporting familiarity with system environmental initiatives reported more awareness and behaviours at home to preserve climate health.ConclusionHealthcare professionals are concerned and motivated to decrease climate impacts on health yet take little action at work to preserve the climate. Because of the intersection of climate change, health, and healthcare, healthcare organizations should prioritize and support meaningful action for healthcare professionals to meet community climate health needs.Implications for the Profession and/or Patient CareHealthcare organizations committed to contributing to climate solutions can use this research to increase healthcare professionals' education, engagement, and impact to preserve the climate and health of communities.Impact Healthcare is a major contributor to carbon emissions, yet healthcare professionals' awareness, motivation, concern, and behaviours related to climate change and health were not clear. Our research showed healthcare professionals are aware and concerned about climate impacts on health but reported low levels of workplace behaviours to protect the climate. The findings of our research will impact healthcare professionals and healthcare organizations to focus efforts on climate‐preserving behaviours. Reporting MethodThis manuscript followed the STROBE guidelines.Patient or Public ContributionNone.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference24 articles.

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2. CDC. (2022).CDC's climate and health program.https://www.cdc.gov/climateandhealth/default.htm

3. Health Care Pollution And Public Health Damage In The United States: An Update

4. Gallup. (2024).Ethics ratings of nearly all professions down in U.S.https://news.gallup.com/poll/608903/ethics‐ratings‐nearly‐professions‐down.aspx

5. Climate Change Perception and Mental Health. Results from a Systematic Review of the Literature

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