Photo by: Pixabay user Gerd Altmann

Adding A Climate Lens To Health Policy In The United States

12/07/2020 | Health Affairs

Climate change increasingly threatens the U.S. health care system’s ability to deliver safe, effective, and efficient care to the American people. In a new article for the first-ever Health Affairs issue focused exclusively on the intersection of climate and health, our Yerby Fellow Dr. Renee Salas, lead author, and Interim Director Dr. Aaron Bernstein outline specific recommendations for achieving climate action through health policy and decision making.

Their recommendations, primarily for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, can serve as a guide for creating a more resilient and equitable health care system that is better prepared to meet the needs of patients today and in the future.

The authors, who lead our Climate MD program, note that with better evidence, governance, and funding, policymakers and health care stakeholders can improve population health and health care’s operational and financial resilience to climate change.

Improve our data-driven response to climate

  • Identify the most vulnerable people in terms of health outcomes, access to care, and modifiable risk factors for intervention.
  • Evaluate public health interventions to determine their efficacy and areas for improvement.

Increase national surveillance for climate-related health risks

  • Establish and fund national real-time surveillance of climate-related health risks.
  • Link public health and health care data sources to create real-time notifications for public health departments, providers, and patients for emerging or intensified climate-sensitive diseases.
  • Develop real-time monitoring of climate-related infections to aid clinicians and increase public awareness of these threats.

Improve transfer of patient data information

  • Improve shortcomings in medical care that commonly arise when climate-sensitive disasters strike, especially around the transfer of patients between institutions.
  • Create a concise, standardized, easy-to-read, and accurate summary of key points of a patient’s history, current medications, and test results would benefit safe and effective care regardless of the circumstances of transfer.

Improve health care resilience coordination planning

  • Create a national strategic climate preparedness plan to bolster the actions of resource-limited local public health departments to more effectively mount responses to climate change–imposed health risks.

Decarbonize our health system

  • Decarbonize health care through low carbon or net-zero emission buildings, zero-carbon electricity, energy efficiency, and renewable power purchase agreements.

Improve resiliency of infrastructures and supply chains

  • Use local assessments of climate vulnerabilities to optimize hospital planning for climate-resilient health care systems (for example, infrastructure improvements such as generators on the roof).

Create a climate-ready health care workforce

  • Ensure health professionals have appropriate knowledge of climate change, and the health care workforce is adaptable to meet the dynamic challenges that climate change poses to health care.
  • Research how climate change will affect the overall number of physicians required, the proportion within each specialty, and the necessary geographic distribution will allow for better health care workforce training and recruitment.
  • In clinical training, place a greater emphasis on having the breadth of skills to allow for better adaptability of practice around disasters. Practitioners will also need to be aware of how climate change may influence their ability to deliver care, from disaster-related mental health impacts to extreme heat exposure.
  • Research the clinical care implications of climate risks and establish core climate change knowledge for each medical discipline.

Improve measures by payers to decrease climate risks

  • Medicare and Medicaid can promote interventions that mitigate climate and health risks by applying a climate lens to their efforts around clinical quality and the expansion of health-related social needs such as housing and utilities.

Incentivize payers to decarbonize

  • Payers could incentivize lower carbon use in health care through financial incentives or integration into pay-for-performance models.

Other authors include Tynan H. Friend, Research Assistant at Harvard Chan School, and Ashish K. Jha, Dean of the Brown University School of Public Health.

Read the full article.

Toward a Climate-Ready Health Care System: Institutional Motivators and Workforce Engagement

Dr. Caleb Dresser argues that health care systems must reframe incentives and engage their workforce to become climate-resilient.

Read Now

Study: Teaching community organizing principles to health professionals significantly increases their capacity to take climate action

Read Now

Federal investments in climate change and health research are inadequate says Harvard analysis

Critical knowledge gaps hinder an evidence-based response and are perpetuated by scarce federal research funds.

Read Now

Hundreds of Hospitals on Atlantic and Gulf Coasts at Risk of Flooding from Hurricanes

Our study is the first to systematically investigate flooding risk to nearly 700 U.S. hospitals on the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts from Category 1-4 storms.

Read Now

Communicating Statistics on the Health Effects of Climate Change

Health professionals need to communicate the health and equity implications of climate change effectively to protect health and motivate action.

Read Now

A Pediatrician’s Guide to Climate Change-Informed Primary Care

A practical approach for connecting climate change with health during pediatric well visits.

Read Now

The medical response to climate change

Our Director Dr. Aaron Bernstein lays out five pillars for the medical response to climate change.

Read Now

Adding A Climate Lens To Health Policy In The United States

Our Yerby Fellow Dr. Renee Salas and Interim Director Dr. Aaron Bernstein outline specific recommendations for achieving climate action through health policy and decision making.

Read Now

'We Don't Have To Live This Way': Doctors Call For Climate Action

A sprawling analysis published by The Lancet focuses on public health data from 2019, and finds that heat waves, air pollution and extreme weather increasingly damage human health.

Read Now

Challenges and opportunities to sustainably scale up surgical, obstetric, and anaesthesia care globally

Strategies for the surgical, obstetric, and anaesthesia community to sustainably scale up SOA care to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and address health equity and social justice issues.

Read Now

Despite climate change threats, few medical schools teach it

Climate change poses threats to public health and concerned health care professionals call for medical schools to incorporate it into their curriculum.

Read Now

Rx for the planet's fever

A physician makes a call to action to his colleagues to treat climate change as a critical health issue.

Read Now

Viewpoint: Encouraging health professionals’ civic engagement to address health impact of climate crisis

Health professionals who want to address the effects of the climate crisis on the health of people and the planet should become more civically engaged.

Read Now

Green resolutions

How you can do right by your health, your wallet, and the planet in 2020.

Read Now

A focus on news about the environment

The Australian bush fires, the politics of climate change, and sea level rise in Boston’s disadvantaged neighborhood were among the topics discussed in a new environmental news roundtable on the WGBH radio show “Under the Radar with Callie Crossley.” One of the panelists featured in the roundtable, which premiered on January 12, 2020, was pediatrician…

Read Now

A doctor's guide to health in a changing climate

Connecting health, health care, and climate change and offering actions families can take to protect their health.

Read Now

The rising health threats of a hot planet

Patients are already feeling the health effects of climate change, and physicians play an important role in providing information and advocating for policies that put less stress on the planet.

Read Now

Why physicians see climate change as a health emergency

Research Fellow Renee Salas on how climate change disrupts patient care.

Read Now

Climate change threatens the achievement of effective universal healthcare

Minimizing the health harms of climate change will only be achieved through an integrated agenda and aligned solutions.

Read Now

Diseases are on the rise due to climate change

Extreme weather events can affect critical medical supplies, and that's just one of the many ways climate change affects health, and why doctors are speaking out.

Read Now

Dr. Renee Salas

Renee N. Salas MD, MPH, MS

Renee's work focuses on the intersection of the climate crisis, health, and healthcare delivery.

View Profile