Challenges and Opportunities for Advancing Work on Climate Change and Public Health
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Section
2.1. Research Design, Sampling, and Recruitment
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 (N = 113) | % of Total (N) | PH Engaged % (N) | PH Non-Engaged % (N) | Non-PH % (N) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Total interviewee type | 35 (40) | 27 (31) | 31 (42) | |
Location | ||||
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) |
Organization Type | ||||
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) |
Position in organization | ||||
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) |
Gender | ||||
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) |
2.2. Analysis of Data
3. Results
3.1. Barriers to Engagement
3.1.1. Public Health Perspectives on Individual-Level Constraints
Belief that Climate Change is not Urgent, Immediate, or a Priority
“In our community, there is a deep tie to the environment that is so dismissed: Latinos care about the environment because of the environment, not just for self-interest…People feel a strong tie with the land…We came from agrarian societies, and voters would support policies that protect water, trees, and land, even with costs associated. They understand the psychological benefits of preserving the earth, as well as the health benefits…That view is not well understood in the larger equity movement.”
Insufficient Understanding of Impacts, Connections, and Solutions
“There is a lack of knowledge that climate change has impact across sectors…In public health, people work on one narrow issue and folks might have a hard time making the links between their public health work and climate change.”
“We do air quality projects… I’m very familiar with the concept of co-benefits but have never thought about it with regard to climate change.” And, “It’s uncanny how connected our work is to climate change. It’s almost coincidental. But I wouldn’t necessarily link Safe Routes to School or physical activity to climate change.” Finally, “WIC would be active in obesity, nutrition, social and environmental determinants of nutrition, but I don’t think of it as a climate change issue. The climate change issue is what happens when the food supply gets disrupted. That is emergency preparedness.”
3.1.2. Public Health Perspectives on Institutional and Structural-Level Constraints
Lack of Capacity in Public Health Infrastructure, Funding, and Workforce
“Public health has taken a huge hit in staffing with most public health departments at 40%–60% of their staffing levels prior to ten years ago, but have more on their plates. The field of public health keeps growing, and we need to prioritize what public health agencies should be doing. Protecting from climate change is one of those things…”“The public health workforce is being eroded rapidly…We will be down staggering numbers. They will need to be paid a living wage and have the tools to work on public health and climate change and be well equipped. It takes more than a guidebook, it takes training, monitoring systems, doing outreach and trainings, and that all takes dollars.”
“You’re trying to do climate change work on top of everything else you’re doing. There is no funding stream, no time set aside. I try to carve time out to focus on it. But you have all these other things that you’re getting paid to do.”
“We’re compartmentalized, and have mandates, missions, and activities that we do every day… feeling stressed in getting them accomplished. If we tell people they need to add climate change, there is a lot of resistance.”
“The (X) Foundation, which gives incredible amounts of money to public health, specifically doesn’t fund environmental problems. That decision holds implications on the ability to be involved in issues like climate change. That really reinforces silos between public health and other disciplines, and within public health.”
Formal and Informal Authority
“The overall direction and mandate in public health is missing the climate change component. How do you make heat-related illness a reportable disease to elevate it to other public health priorities like sexually transmitted infections?”
“Public health is struggling to see how it fits in. From an agency perspective, people think it’s relevant, but are constrained by the fact that they don’t have jurisdictional authority to do something about it. Addressing climate change would be mitigating greenhouse gases, but there is no jurisdictional authority related to that at all. They may feel that their hands are tied.”
Lack of Leadership: Risk Aversion and Politicization of Climate Change
“Public health should be speaking out more on the importance of addressing climate change”
“In a public health department like this, the legislation controls your budget, and if there are legislators who feel in any way threatened by interventions, you could find yourself not getting funding for different things.”
“Some other parts of the government are less risk averse, but ours is more so… Their whole thing is that ‘we don’t want any surprises and everything goes through us’. Anything that causes anyone to be upset, they shy away from it.”
“They need to know the Board of Supervisors (BOS) won’t fire them if they speak out on climate change…. Not until people are at the end of their careers will they say what needs to be said.”
Narrow Framework Limits Work on Root Causes of Climate and Health
“Most of what we do as a public health department is service delivery. Prevention—which is what climate change work is—is a very tiny part of what we do.”
“So many public health departments are still entrenched in how funding is coming, silos, disease conditions, and individual behavior change. Those local health departments that are at least looking at neighborhood conditions will be better off. Climate change is still pretty far out.”
“Other things will have to go and be shifted to someone else’s responsibility so that public health can do its work at the broad population level…and focus on the macro-level changes that are needed.”
“The focus on the air pollution benefits is myopic. That’s another challenge for public health: Even within the EPA, everything is organized according to a disease outcome or a health issue. Climate is a large problem that requires systems thinking. If we limit the conversation only to (air pollution), that’s short sighted without thinking about underlying issues.”
Compartmentalization within and across Sectors
“We don’t understand each other at all. We’re in different disciplines; don’t have knowledge of their expertise, different language, and different emphasis on what’s important. It takes twice as much work; you have to get a rudimentary understanding of what they’re doing. Some ways to get over that is willingness to spend a little more time making sure people understand each other.”
“There’s still a sense that public health shouldn’t be in the room because things are not a health initiative. But all public agencies should be responsible to the public and part of that is keeping them safe and healthy. There are turf issues, especially with infrastructure agencies, transit authority, or pollution-planning.”
“Air pollution control district and planning are strong partners, but we still tend to get siloed, and they still think climate change is theirs. They all talk ‘health’, but don’t invite health to the table. (X University) organized a state-wide conference, and health was a major topic on the agenda, but they never invited (local health department) to the conference.”
3.1.3. Non-Public Health Perspectives on Barriers to Public Health Engagement
“I don’t know why public health feels that they are not allowed to do that. (A few public health leaders) are willing to stick their necks out, take political risks, and state what will happen to health with various policies.”
“One of the most disheartening times in the movement was when people started to just fund climate, thinking it was its own thing, but it’s connected to every issue we work on. If you’re working on clean air, on food, you’re working on climate.”
“The siloed mentality also means we don’t get the big picture… this is all inter-related.”
“Part of the issue is a lack of integration and a lack of systems thinking. We look one piece at a time, but this affects us in a multitude of ways and we need to bring people together to solve these problems. We always solve one thing and create another problem, like with biofuels. There are water issues, rising food prices, even immigration problems that arise from making decisions in isolation.”
3.2. Opportunities for Engagement
3.2.1. Integrate Climate Change into Current Public Health Practice
“…first help people see that they already are influencing issues around climate change with what they do every day. Just tweaking and finessing it rather than completely changing their workload.”
“We are involved with work on air quality, safe neighborhoods, reduction of traffic, water quality, biking paths, walkable communities, and obesity prevention (through community gardens, famers markets, and city planning). I do not make the links explicit currently, but would be interesting in doing so with guidance on ‘how to’”.
“The public health sector needs to get their research out there. Good work has been done, but it has not effectively been shared with the public…both at community and institution level. This would provide opportunities for advocacy and help put pressure on legislators to introduce stronger legislation with more information on public health.”
3.2.2. Provide Active Inter-Sectoral Support for Climate Solutions with Health Co-Benefits
“There’s a lot of research supporting that active transit and affordable housing will have a climate change impact. It’s a multi-step connection, but people don’t often make the connection in lectures to elected officials or presentations at Commission. They sometimes connect the dots, but they may just be listed as a bullet on why active transportation is good.”
“With health and adaptation, it’s still complicated for a planner to understand. We understand extreme heat events, but I don’t have a background in terms of thresholds and what numbers matter. It’s still hard for me to understand what the community impact will be. I couldn’t go the next step and say the risk for my community in terms of health is this. Public health can make that data more accessible to planners like me.”
3.2.3. Engage and Mobilize Health Professionals and Impacted Communities with a Health Frame
“…was the motherhood & apple pie of that (political campaign). Our opponents couldn’t criticize or devalue them as a messenger. They were a messenger beyond reproach, with a message beyond reproach”.
“There is a lot of messaging that the public health community could do, to create an environment where policy can thrive. We have pushback from conservative movements. People who are wavering and on the fence, don’t take time to read science, they can hear a public health voice more than a planner or politician.”
4. Discussion
4.1. Education and Communications for the Public Health Sector
4.2. Target Public Health Institutional Barriers
4.3. Build Leadership
4.4. Work on Root Causes of Climate Change and Poor Health
4.5. Coordinate and Shift Funding
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix
A. “Public Health Engaged” Interview Tool
A1. Introduction
A2. Public Health Involvement and Role
- What about areas like maternal and child health, infectious diseases, or reproductive health?
A3. Framing
- What about areas like maternal and child health, infectious diseases, or reproductive health?
- Are there any health messages frames that been particularly effective in your experience, or ideas you have as to what you think could be most compelling for your co-workers?
- What about for the clients and population that you work with?
A4. Barriers
- Are there specific issues, organizational, time, resources, leadership, etc., that make it hard for you to engage in climate-related work?
- Are there specific issues, organizational, time, resources, leadership, etc., that make it hard for you to engage in climate-related work?
- What do you think it would take to get public health workers more engaged?
- What would be effective ways to motivate and activate public health workers on the issue of climate change?
A5. Opportunities
- More information and understanding,
- time,
- resources,
- funding,
- leadership,
- peer support
A6. Multi-Sector Planning and Decision-Making for Climate Change and Health
- What do you see as any unique contribution or possible contribution of public health in that work?
- Did others see PH as having a unique contribution, and what was that?
A7. Narratives about Public Health and Climate Change
- Did others see PH as having a unique contribution, and what was that?
- Why does that story stick in your mind?
- How does that story make you feel?
A8. Networking
B. “Public Health Non-Engaged” Interview Tool
B1. Introduction
B2. General Level of Awareness/Concern about Climate Change and Health
- How does that story make you feel?
- Are there any stories or things you’ve read or heard that particularly resonate for you?
- What does this story or information make you feel?
- Why do you think it resonates for you? What is important about this?
B3. Current Work Related to Climate Change and Health
- If not, why not?
- If yes, what links are you thinking about exploring more in your work?
- If not, why not?
- If yes, explore how the connections could be made in their work.
- If no, explore why not.
B4. Opportunities and Barriers
- If no, explore why not.
- more information and understanding,
- time,
- resources,
- funding,
- leadership,
- peer support
- other supports?
- funding,
- If so, what is that role?
- What are some of the things you think public health workers might do to address climate change?
- Are there any larger “upstream” barriers that would prevent your organization or agency from becoming more involved in work related to climate change and health?
B5. Narratives about Public Health and Climate Change
- What do you find most rewarding about it?
- Can you tell me a story about an accomplishment or something you feel really good about in the work you are doing?
- Why does that story stick in your mind?
- How does that story make you feel?
- How does that story make you feel?
- Are there any stories or things you’ve read or heard that particularly resonate for you?
- What does this story or information make you feel?
- Why do you think it resonates for you? What is important about this?
B6. Networking and Closing
C. “Non-Public Health” Interview Tool
- To discover how PH can more successfully engage with the non-PH sector working on CC to increase effectiveness of action.
- To explore the extent to which people working on CC already see the health connections.
C1. Introduction
C2. Relationship between Their Work and Public Health
- What issues does your organization work on?
- Where does climate change fit in terms of your organization’s priorities?
- What issues does your organization work on?
- If yes, explore how the connections could be made in their work.
- If no, explore why not.
C3. Framing
C4. Partnering with Public Health
- Has that work with PH helped forward your agenda?
- What was successful about that partnership and what was challenging?
- How did working with that agency get started?
- Has that partnership changed anything in your or their work?
- What do you think you and others got out of having public health at the table?
- What could support building that relationship?
- What are some of the barriers to you creating those partnerships?
- What would you like to see your local PH groups or departments do?
C5. Narratives about Public Health and Climate Change
- Why does that story stick in your mind?
- How does that story make you feel?
C6. Networking
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Gould, S.; Rudolph, L. Challenges and Opportunities for Advancing Work on Climate Change and Public Health. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2015, 12, 15649-15672. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph121215010
Gould S, Rudolph L. Challenges and Opportunities for Advancing Work on Climate Change and Public Health. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2015; 12(12):15649-15672. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph121215010
Chicago/Turabian StyleGould, Solange, and Linda Rudolph. 2015. "Challenges and Opportunities for Advancing Work on Climate Change and Public Health" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 12, no. 12: 15649-15672. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph121215010
APA StyleGould, S., & Rudolph, L. (2015). Challenges and Opportunities for Advancing Work on Climate Change and Public Health. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 12(12), 15649-15672. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph121215010