Why should public health agencies across Canada conduct climate change and health vulnerability assessments?

Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne De Santé Publique
Chris G Buse

Abstract

Climate change is increasingly impacting population health outcomes related to several areas of public health service delivery across Canada, and internationally. As a result, public health practitioners are increasingly looking for guidance on how to begin planning for and adapting to a myriad of health-related climate impacts. This paper outlines several benefits for local or regional health agencies in conducting climate change and health vulnerability assessments (CCHVAs), based on the author's experience in conducting two of Canada's first comprehensive assessments. These benefits include, but are not limited to establishing suitable baseline understandings of past, present, and future climate-related health risks; providing guidance on mechanisms to reduce health inequities that may be exacerbated by climate change; generating credibility for health agencies to engage with climate change and pursue collaborative, intersectoral relationships with a range of likely and unlikely allies; identifying suitable, cost-effective adaptation options in the form of public health programming; and encouraging decision-makers to produce proactive policy actions to redress potential climate impacts on population health. Completing a CCHV...Continue Reading

References

Apr 8, 2014·Lancet·Alistair WoodwardAndy Haines
Jul 9, 2014·Environmental Health Perspectives·Jeremy J HessGeorge Luber
Sep 23, 2014·JAMA : the Journal of the American Medical Association·Jonathan A PatzAndrew Haines
Jun 27, 2015·Lancet·Nick WattsAnthony Costello
Nov 20, 2016·Lancet·Nick WattsAnthony Costello

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Citations

Mar 7, 2019·Frontiers in Psychiatry·Mary WiktorowiczSheila A Boamah
Oct 17, 2018·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Morgan M LevisonCharles Gardner
Jul 6, 2020·Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health·Chris G Buse, Rebecca Patrick

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