| Literature DB >> 26690194 |
Solange Gould1, Linda Rudolph2.
Abstract
Climate change poses a major threat to public health. Strategies that address climate change have considerable potential to benefit health and decrease health inequities, yet public health engagement at the intersection of public health, equity, and climate change has been limited. This research seeks to understand the barriers to and opportunities for advancing work at this nexus. We conducted semi-structured in-depth interviews (N = 113) with public health and climate change professionals and thematic analysis. Barriers to public health engagement in addressing climate change include individual perceptions that climate change is not urgent or solvable and insufficient understanding of climate change's health impacts and programmatic connections. Institutional barriers include a lack of public health capacity, authority, and leadership; a narrow framework for public health practice that limits work on the root causes of climate change and health; and compartmentalization within and across sectors. Opportunities include integrating climate change into current public health practice; providing inter-sectoral support for climate solutions with health co-benefits; and using a health frame to engage and mobilize communities. Efforts to increase public health sector engagement should focus on education and communications, building leadership and funding, and increasing work on the shared root causes of climate change and health inequities.Entities:
Keywords: climate change; health equity; intersectoral collaboration; public health; public health practice; qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26690194 PMCID: PMC4690946 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph121215010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Categories and definitions of interviewees.
| Interviewee Type | Definition | N |
|---|---|---|
| PH-engaged | Public health professionals who report working on climate change and health, and articulate explicit relationships between their work and climate change without prompting. | 40 |
| PH non-engaged | Public health professionals who do not report working on climate change, and do not articulate connections between their work and climate change without prompting. | 31 |
| Non-PH | People whose work focuses on climate change, and who do not primarily identify as public health professionals. | 42 |
Participant attributes by interviewee type.
| Participant Attributes ( | % of Total ( | PH Engaged % ( | PH Non-Engaged % ( | Non-PH % ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 35 (40) | 27 (31) | 31 (42) | ||
| California | 90 (102) | 77.5 (31) | 100 (31) | 95.2 (40) |
| * San Francisco Bay Area and Northern California | 44 (50) | 58.1 (18) | 54.8 (17) | 37.5 (15) |
| * Sacramento area | 18 (20) | 9.6 (3) | 12.9 (4) | 32.5 (13) |
| * San Joaquin Valley | 11 (12) | 0 (0) | 22.6 (7) | 12.5 (5) |
| * Los Angeles and Southern California | 18 (20) | 32.3 (10) | 9.7 (3) | 17.5 (7) |
| Other States | 10 (11) | 22.5 (9) | 0 (0) | 4.8 (2) |
| Academic | 8.8 (10) | 20 (8) | 0 (0) | 4.8 (2) |
| Governmental | 34.5 (39) | 40 (16) | 54.8 (17) | 14.3 (6) |
| Non-governmental Organization | 56.6 (64) | 40 (16) | 45.2 (14) | 81.0 (34) |
| Non-executive | 47.8 (54) | 60 (24) | 22.6 (7) | 54.8 (23) |
| Executive or Director | 52.2 (59) | 40 (16) | 77.4 (24) | 45.2 (19) |
| Female | 57.5 (65) | 62.5 (25) | 51.6 (16) | 57.1 (24) |
| Male | 42.5 (48) | 37.5 (15) | 48.4 (15) | 42.9 (18) |
* California regional percentages based on California totals.