World Health Summit 2024: Health workers on climate, community, and the urgent need for action

World Health Summit 2024: Health workers on climate, community, and the urgent need for action

As global health leaders gather in Berlin for the World Health Summit, the Geneva Learning Foundation?calls for the insights of health workers on the frontlines of climate and health ?to be heard amidst the global dialogue.

As part of Teach to Reach 10, a new?eyewitness report ?analyses 219 new insights shared by 122 health professionals – primarily those working in local communities across Africa, Asia and Latin America – to two critical questions:

How is climate change affecting the health of the communities you serve right now?

And what actions should world leaders take to help you protect the people in your care?

(Teach to Reach ?is a regular peer learning event. The tenth edition on 20-21 June 2024 gathered 21, 389 community-based health workers to share experience of climate change impacts on health. Request your invitation for Teach to Reach 11 on 5-6 December 2024 here .)

Their answers paint a picture of the accelerating health crisis unfolding in the world’s most climate-vulnerable regions.

Community nurses, doctors, midwives and public health officers detail how volatile weather patterns are driving up malnutrition, infectious disease, mental illness, and more – while simultaneously battering health systems and blocking patient access to care.

Yet woven throughout are also threads of resilience, ingenuity and hope. Health advocates are not just passively observing the impacts of climate change, but actively responding – often with scarce resources.

From spearheading tree-planting initiatives to strengthening infectious disease surveillance to promoting climate literacy, they are innovating locally-tailored solutions.

Importantly, respondents emphasize that climate impacts cannot be viewed in isolation, but rather as one facet of the interlocking crises of environmental destruction, poverty, and health inequity.

Their insights make clear that climate action and community health are two sides of the same coin – and that neither will be achieved without deep investment in local health workforces and systems.

Rooted in direct lived experience and charged with moral urgency, these frontline voices offer a stirring reminder that climate change is not some distant specter, but a life-and-death challenge already at the doorsteps of the global poor.

As this new collection of insights implores, it’s high time their perspectives moved from the margins to the center of the climate debate.

As Charlotte Mbuh of The Geneva Learning Foundation explains: “We hope that the chorus of voices will grow to strengthen the case for? why and how investment in human resources for health is likely to be a ‘best buy’ for community-focused efforts to build the climate resilience of public health systems.”

Jones, I., Mbuh, C., Sadki, R., & Steed, I. (2024). Climate change and health: Health workers on climate, community, and the urgent need for action (1.0). The Geneva Learning Foundation.?https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11194918

ndaeyo iwot

TGLF AMBASSADOR at The Geneva Learning Foundation (TGLF)

1 个月

Interesting event

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Interesting event

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Folake akosile

C4D SPECIALIST

1 个月

Exciting!!! Looking forward to Teach to Reach 11. Also climate change is real and affecting the whole world ??

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Yildiz Arslan

Senior Institutional Partnership Advisor | Middle East, North Africa and Eastern Europe | Save the Children Denmark

1 个月

Encouraging to see leaders at the World Health Summit engaging with health workers like La?titia Eulodie Zagré, who bring invaluable first-hand insights on the link between climate and health. Civil society, especially frontline workers, must guide decision-making to ensure that policies are not only well-informed but also community-centered. The Geneva Learning Foundation (TGLF), thank you for providing a platform that allow for these voices to be heard.

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