| Literature DB >> 31847858 |
Toni Delany-Crowe1, Dora Marinova2, Matt Fisher3, Michael McGreevy3, Fran Baum3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sustainable management of the natural environment is essential. Continued environmental degradation will lead to worsened health outcomes in countries and across generations. The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) provide a framework for viewing the preservation of natural environments and the promotion of health, well-being and health equity as interconnected pursuits. Within the SDG framework the goals of promoting environmental sustainability and human health are unified through attention to the social determinants of health and health equity (SDH/HE). This paper presents findings from a document analysis of all Australian environment sector policies and selected legislation to examine whether and how current approaches support progress toward achieving SDG goals on water, climate change, and marine ecosystems (Goals 6, 13 and 14), and to consider implications for health and health equity.Entities:
Keywords: Climate change; Health equity; Natural environment; Planetary health; Social determinants of health; Sustainable development goals; Water; Well-being
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31847858 PMCID: PMC6918614 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-019-0509-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Key focus areas of SDGs 6, 13 and 14
| Sustainable Development Goals | Key focus areas for action |
|---|---|
| SDG 6: | Fresh water resource management, safe drinking water, sanitation facilities, water scarcity, flooding, wastewater management and efficiency of water use. |
| SDG 13: | Strengthen resilience and adaptive capacity to climate-related hazards, mitigate risks where possible, lower greenhouse gas emissions, improve education, awareness-raising and human and institutional capacity, and implement early warning systems. |
| SDG 14: | Sustainable use and conservation of oceans, overfishing, ocean acidification, expansion of protected areas for marine biodiversity, intensification of research capacity to preserve marine resources and reduce marine pollution. |
Source: [8]
Coding framework applied during the qualitative document analysis process
| Focus area for coding | Coding categories | SDH/HE coded throughout all stages of the analysis |
|---|---|---|
| Problem framing | • What is the problem represented to be? • What response is considered appropriate by the government? • What else needs to be addressed? • How does the sector understand the relationships between their work and health and equity? | - Education - Food - Health systems - Housing - Distribution of income - Stigma/discrimination - Social relationships - Social exclusion - Transport - Employment - Welfare system - Land/Country (interdependent relationship between an individual and their ancestral lands and seas) - Gender - Safety - Culture - Open space - Natural environment - Built environment - Climate change [ |
| Are the | • health as a value • health equity as a value | |
| Are the | • improved health as a goal • improved health equity as a goal | |
| Is the | • evidence on social determinants of health • evidence on health inequities | |
| Are the | • improve average health • reduce health inequities | |
| Are the | • improve average health • reduce health inequities |
Source: Adapted from [14]
Summary of main topics addressed by Australian environment sector policies
| Topic | Details of foci in the environment sector policies |
|---|---|
| Population growth | Size of population, where the population lives and how people live |
| Climate change | As a risk to environment systems, economic productivity and human health |
| Air pollution | Particularly as associated with increased population growth and car dependency |
| Land use | Risks associated with land clearing, and potential environmental impacts of new infrastructure developments |
| Soil and water quality | Implications for food production, industry, and health of species |
| Water management and use | Pertaining to a range of aqueous environments such as rivers, lakes, wetlands and oceans. Management processes, human uses and associated risks |
| National parks and other protected areas, such as marine parks | Importance of controlled use to support conservation, biodiversity, and tourism. Economic opportunities associated with managed use of these areas |
| Renewable energy | As a green industry, with potential to reduce climate change impact and support transition in employment |
| Heritage and Crown land | Preservation of historically and culturally significant sites, rules to permit culturally significant activities in national parks, and co-management of land with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders |
| Habitat destruction | As leading to species decline and/or extinction |
| Resources exploration and production | Impacts of exploration for oil, gas and coal, and the associated environmental risks |
| Environmental events and disasters | Particularly bushfire and storms (but also floods and droughts). Often linked to climate change |
| Waste | Production of excessive waste, ineffective handling, waterway pollution and potential for re-use |