| Literature DB >> 34179331 |
Hari S Iyer1,2, Nicole V DeVille2,3, Olivia Stoddard4, Jennifer Cole5, Samuel S Myers6, Huichu Li6, Elise G Elliott3,6, Marcia P Jimenez2,7, Peter James6,7, Christopher D Golden4,6.
Abstract
Understanding and responding to adverse human health impacts of global environmental change will be a major priority of 21st century public health professionals. The emerging field of planetary health aims to face this challenge by studying and promoting policies that protect the health of humans and of the Earth's natural systems that support them. Public health, drawing on its experience of guiding policies to improve population health, has contributed to planetary health's development. Yet, few public health practitioners are familiar with planetary health's systems-oriented approaches for understanding relationships between economic development, environmental degradation, and human health. In this narrative review, we present key planetary health concepts and show how systems thinking has guided its development. We discuss historical approaches to studying impacts of economic development on human health and the environment. We then review novel conceptual frameworks adopted by planetary health scientists to study and forecast impacts of policies that influence human health and Earth's natural systems at varying spatiotemporal scales. We conclude by presenting examples of how applying the "Doughnut" model (an economic framework where the needs of people are met without overshooting the world's ecological limits) could guide policies for promoting health co-benefits to humans and natural systems.Entities:
Keywords: Air pollution; Cities; Environmental health; Nutrition; Physical activity; Planetary health; Public health
Year: 2021 PMID: 34179331 PMCID: PMC8213960 DOI: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2021.100844
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SSM Popul Health ISSN: 2352-8273
Fig. 1Environmental Kuznet's Curve (Dinda, 2004) represented by a simple conceptual model. Taking the perspective of Kuznet, Economic development leads to positive effects on human health, and initially negative but then positive effects on natural systems health.
Fig. 2Raworth's doughnut (Raworth, 2017) represented by a conceptual model. The model takes perspectives of climate scientists, health and social scientists, and planetary health (represented by the eyeball icon). The model simplifies the pathways through which economic development influences human health and the health of natural systems. From health and social sciences, we see that components of the social foundation, including inequality, education, and income, influence human health. From climate science, we see that economic development leads to pressures on natural systems health through land conversion, climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution. Planetary health and the doughnut framework allow us to connect these impacts of economic development on natural systems health and human health in far more complex ways than the Kuznet's curve.
Fig. 3Global shortfalls in the social foundation and overshoot of the ecological ceiling in the Doughnut. Source: Raworth K, A Doughnut for the Anthropocene: humanity's compass in the 21st century. The Lancet Planetary Health 2017; 1e48-e49. https://doi.org/10.1016/S254205196(1730028-1). Reproduced under the Creative Commons, license CC BY 4.0 (Raworth, 2017).
Fig. 4Conceptual model for identifying modifiable societal behaviours that influence adverse health and natural systems impacts of the global food system. Economic development influences food production, which is influenced by diet preferences. Climate science shows how the food system influences adverse effects on natural systems through land conversion, climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution. Behavioural science and epidemiology show how diet preferences lead to consumption of red meat and plant-based diets, which exert different effects on human health. Modifying diet preferences to switch consumption from red meat to plant-based diets would lead to improved human and natural systems health. (For interpretation of the references to colour in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the Web version of this article.)
Fig. 5Conceptual model for identifying modifiable societal behaviours that influence adverse health and natural systems impacts of urbanization. Urbanization leads to air pollution that is influenced by commuting patterns of residents. Public health scientists and urban planners can study different types of transport, and effects of incentivizing use of public transport and cycling/walking, which lead to better human health through higher physical activity and lower obesity. Reducing reliance on driving also leads to better natural systems health through lower emissions.
Fig. 6Conceptual model for identifying modifiable aspects of urban form that lead to adverse health of humans and natural systems. Unplanned urbanization contributes to land conversion, climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution, leading to poorer natural systems health. These changes in natural systems impact human behaviour through lower nature contact and the presence of urban heat islands. Lower nature contact is associated with numerous health risk factors (physical activity, obesity, mental health) and other chronic disease and mortality outcomes in humans. Temperature is associated with increased risk of mortality at lower and upper extremes.
Given its longstanding commitments reducing morbidity and mortality and achieving social justice, public health is well-placed to act at individual, societal, and global level to protect planetary health. All allied health professionals should share these professional goals ( General practitioners and primary care physicians should implement planetary health practices through ensuring that their businesses employ green and sustainable practices, and advocating for behaviors and lifestyles among their patients and communities that promote planetary health. At individual level, pursue lifestyles that limit climate impact, encourage networks to do so, and support political causes that align with planetary health. As a physician, counsel patients to prepare for climate change, adopt lifestyles that mitigate their own impact. As a professional body, state a unified position on climate change and planetary health and advocate for policies that mitigate adverse impacts. ( Physicians should include planetary health principles as part of education. Calls for reducing impact of health care industry through decarbonization. ( Nurses should adopt a social justice lens and embrace planetary health principles to better align professional goals and objectives with addressing social determinants of health. ( Public health education should include courses that prepare trainees for addressing climate change. ( Allied health professionals should pledge their commitment to planetary health, analogous to pledges of the Hippocratic Oath taken by physicians ( Global surgery argues that climate change will lead to greater demand for surgical services. There is a need for the profession to consider how climate disasters will impact ability to deliver high quality surgical care. Surgical programs should adopt sustainability practices in delivering care by reusing equipment when possible, advocate for planetary health policies, support research on sustainable surgical practice, and advocate for reducing emissions in the health care system ( |