A story of (in)coherence: climate adaptation for health in South African policies

Author:

Quintana Amanda V1ORCID,Mayhew Susannah H1,Kovats Sari1,Gilson Lucy12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Public Health Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine , Keppel Street, London WC1E 7HT, United Kingdom

2. Division of Health Policy and Systems, School of Public Health and Family Medicine, University of Cape Town , Observatory, Cape Town 7925, South Africa

Abstract

Abstract Climate adaptation strengthens and builds the resilience of health systems to future climate-related shocks. Adaptation strategies and policies are necessary tools for governments to address the long-term impacts of climate change and enable the health system to respond to current impacts such as extreme weather events. Since 2011 South Africa has national climate change policies and adaptation strategies, yet there is uncertainty about: how these policies and plans are executed; the extent to which health policies include adaptation; and the extent of policy coherence across sectors and governance levels. A policy document analysis was conducted to examine how South African climate change, development and health policy documents reflect the health adaptation response across national and Western Cape levels and to assess the extent of coherence across key health and environment sector policy documents, including elements to respond to health-related climate risks, that can support implementation. Our findings show that overall there is incoherence in South African climate adaptation within health policy documents. Although health adaptation measures are somewhat coherent in national level policies, there is limited coherence within Western Cape provincial level documents and limited discussion on climate adaptation, especially for health. Policies reflect formal decisions and should guide decision-makers and resourcing, and sectoral policies should move beyond mere acknowledgement of adaptation responses to a tailored plan of actions that are institutionalized and location and sector specific. Activities beyond documents also impact the coherence and implementation of climate adaptation for health in South Africa. Clear climate risk-specific documents for the health sector would provide a stronger plan to support the implementation of health adaptation and contribute to building health system’s resilience.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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