Climate action for health: Inter‐regional engagement to share knowledge to guide mitigation and adaptation actions

Author:

Fears Robin1,Canales‐Holzeis Claudia1,Caussy Deoraj2,Harper Sherilee L.3,Hoe Victor Chee Wai4,McNeil Jeremy N.5,Mogwitz Johanna1,ter Meulen Volker1,Haines Andy67

Affiliation:

1. InterAcademy Partnership Trieste Italy

2. Integrated Epidemiology Solutions, Cybervillage, Ebene Reduit Mauritius

3. School of Public Health University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

4. Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Medicine University of Malaya Kuala Lumpur Malaysia

5. Department of Biology Western University London Ontario Canada

6. Department of Public Health, Environments and Society London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine London UK

7. Department of Population Health London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine London UK

Abstract

AbstractClimate change, attributable to human activity, is increasingly contributing to a global health crisis. The scale, nature and timing of adverse effects on physical and mental health, via direct and indirect pathways, vary within and between regions but there are common challenges that can be tackled by better integrated mitigation and adaptation actions. The actions described in this paper would have benefits for health if appropriately implemented, both by reducing the health risks of climate change and from the ancillary (co‐)benefits of mitigation such as from reduced air pollution as a result of phasing out fossil fuels. There are unprecedented health threats from climate change but also unprecedented opportunities to use scientific knowledge to inform policy and practice. Much can be done now to use the evidence already available to effect rapid and decisive action as well as generating new evidence to support effective policy development and implementation. This paper draws on an inter‐regional, inclusive, project by the InterAcademy Partnership, the global network of more than 140 academies of science, engineering and medicine, to summarise evidence available worldwide in order to help inform options for policy making. A particular focus is on clarifying climate change mitigation and adaptation solutions and their implementation for the benefit of the most vulnerable groups. The present authors actively participated in managing this project which encouraged academies to capture diverse impacts and policy options by evaluating and synthesising evidence from their own countries to inform policy for collective and customised action at national, regional and global levels. Using a systems‐based approach, recommendations from the project in this publication are transdisciplinary and multisectoral. Despite the accumulating evidence, protecting and improving human health have not yet become major focal points in global climate change policy discussions. Drawing on the IAP project outputs, we strongly recommend that health and health equity must now come to the foreground, accompanied by much greater allocation of climate finance to health‐related programmes.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Law,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Political Science and International Relations,Economics and Econometrics,Global and Planetary Change

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