Environmental responsibility in the Israeli health system in the era of climate change: a required paradigm shift.

IF 3.5 4区 医学 Q1 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Raanan Raz, Maya Negev, Michael Hauzer, Eliaz Miller, Ora Paltiel, Meidad Kissinger
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Abstract

Background: Environmental management in the Israeli health system is driven primarily by safety regulations. Such regulations aim to reduce hazardous exposures to employees, patients, and visitors, as well as some specific aspects of broader environmental toxicity to humans and nature. Most environmental precautions in the system target traditional exposures and do not specifically consider the health system's own impact on climate change. This article aims to justify incorporating climate change mitigation actions into short- and long-term plans in Israeli health organizations and present a schematic strategic roadmap to do so.

Main body: Climate change poses many threats to global health, including risks from severe weather events, changes in vector-borne diseases, increased hazardous air pollutants, food and water shortages, and adverse effects on reproductive health. The most effective effort in climate change mitigation is reducing greenhouse gas emissions to the atmosphere. Ignoring the health sector's emissions contradicts the ancient medical principle: first, do no harm (primum non-nocere). Furthermore, many climate mitigation methods introduce additional health co-benefits. Special attention and medical considerations are needed to safely reduce emissions from the health sector. This article reviews healthcare's most common emission sources, including energy consumption, transportation, food, waste, supplies, and the supply chain. An organizational carbon management strategy should include recognizing the problem and committing to action, estimating the organizational carbon footprint, developing and prioritizing alternative interventions, and developing a carbon management plan with measurable short- and intermediate-term goals.

Conclusion: Climate mitigation in the health sector is encompassed by the moral obligation of the Israeli healthcare system to do no harm. Performance measures to support GHG emission reductions should be adopted into the existing, successful Israeli programs of quality measures in medicine, both in the community and hospitals. In addition, Israel academic institutions for health and medical education should incorporate sustainable health into their curricula for students of health professions and as part of continuous medical education. Such policy actions will contribute to a healthy health system that supports climate change mitigation while providing health co-benefits to the Israeli population.

气候变化时代以色列卫生系统的环境责任:必要的范式转变。
背景:以色列卫生系统的环境管理主要由安全法规驱动。这些法规旨在减少对员工、病人和访客的危险暴露,以及对人类和自然的更广泛的环境毒性的某些具体方面。该系统中的大多数环境预防措施针对的是传统暴露,而没有具体考虑卫生系统本身对气候变化的影响。本文旨在证明将减缓气候变化行动纳入以色列卫生组织的短期和长期计划是合理的,并提出了这样做的示意图战略路线图。主体:气候变化对全球健康构成许多威胁,包括来自恶劣天气事件的风险、病媒传播疾病的变化、有害空气污染物增加、粮食和水资源短缺以及对生殖健康的不利影响。减缓气候变化的最有效努力是减少向大气排放温室气体。忽视卫生部门的排放违背了古老的医学原则:第一,不伤害(首要的无害)。此外,许多减缓气候变化的方法还带来了额外的健康附带效益。为安全减少卫生部门的排放,需要特别注意和医疗方面的考虑。本文回顾了医疗保健最常见的排放源,包括能源消耗、运输、食品、废物、供应和供应链。组织碳管理战略应包括认识到问题并承诺采取行动,估计组织碳足迹,制定替代干预措施并确定优先顺序,以及制定具有可衡量的短期和中期目标的碳管理计划。结论:卫生部门的气候减缓工作包含在以色列卫生保健系统不造成伤害的道德义务中。应将支持减少温室气体排放的绩效措施纳入以色列现有的、成功的社区和医院医疗质量措施方案。此外,以色列保健和医学教育学术机构应将可持续保健纳入其保健专业学生的课程,并作为继续医学教育的一部分。这些政策行动将有助于建立一个健康的卫生系统,支持减缓气候变化,同时为以色列人民提供健康的共同利益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
4.40%
发文量
38
审稿时长
28 weeks
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