Completed
As the climate crisis intensifies extreme weather events, increases global temperatures, and accelerates sea level rise, communities least able to respond are bearing the largest burden. This two-day virtual workshop brought together people with lived experience, environmental health experts, resilience practitioners, and climate scientists to outline the disproportionate impact that climate change has on communities experiencing health disparities and environmental injustice. The workshop addressed three critical questions. Speakers and participants shared their visions for the future and suggested specific policies decision-makers can implement today to address the intersecting crises of climate change and health inequity.
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Workshop_in_brief
·2022
As the effects of climate change become more widespread and significant, communities least able to respond are bearing the largest burden. In the United States, communities disadvantaged by a legacy of racial segregation and environmental injustice struggle with disparate health outcomes, are vulner...
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Description
Ad hoc planning committees, convened by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, will organize a series of public workshops to explore specific actions that can be taken when working with communities and other stakeholders to improve climate-related health outcomes and reduce health disparities. Gaps in research to achieve these goals will also be discussed. The workshop series will bring insights from leaders and innovators from vulnerable communities that are adversely and disproportionately impacted and offer a platform to foster connections with decision-makers from multiple sectors. Invited presentations will explore the actors and actions that can help advance the design and investment in health equity in the natural and built environments. In developing the workshop series, the planning committees will consider:
- The state of knowledge on the health effects of climate change on vulnerable communities in the United States that are disproportionately impacted, along with existing and promising research, resources, policies, and design strategies from government, industry, and communities;
- Community initiatives that have sought to address climate-related health inequities in disproportionately impacted communities; and
- Opportunities for decision-makers, leaders, and stakeholders at the national, state, and local levels to collaborate with communities to close capacity gaps and design constructive solutions to climate-related health disparities.
The series will culminate in a public discussion on the information presented and will explore pathways available for decision-makers, researchers, and planners at all levels to design equitable solutions to the public health consequences associated with the climate crisis, including future research possibilities and opportunities for action. Proceedings in brief capturing the presentations and discussions from each workshop will be prepared by a designated rapporteur in accordance with institutional guidelines. Insights will also be captured and organized by actor and sector in a digital, user-friendly workshop guide. The workshops will not produce conclusions or recommendations.
The first workshop in the series is focused on bringing together environmental health experts, resilience practitioners, climate scientists, and people with lived experience to discuss the disproportionate impact of climate change on communities experiencing health disparities and environmental injustice, and on suggesting specific actions that decision-makers can take to address the intersecting crises of climate change and health inequity.
Contributors
Committee
Chair
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Member
Sponsors
Department of Health and Human Services
Internal Funding
Other, Federal
Staff
Alex Reich
Lead
Abigail Ulman