Manjulaa Narasimhan, Carmen H Logie, Vanessa Brizuela, Andie MacNeil
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Climate-related extreme weather events (EWE) affect sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) outcomes through complex and multi-level pathways. These include institutional-level effects on health systems, such as damaged health infrastructure and roads, barriers to retaining qualified health and care workers, as well as healthcare access barriers due to increased economic precarity, displacement and migration. Furthermore, EWE effects on SRHR disproportionately affect marginalised communities. Optimising SRHR in the context of climate change and EWE thus require moving beyond traditional health system approaches. Self-care interventions (e.g. HIV self-tests) and self-care actions (e.g. self-monitoring blood glucose during pregnancy), whereby affected individuals and communities have increased control and agency over their own health practices, can ensure essential SRHR needs can be maintained during crises. Yet opportunities for SRHR self-care strategies in communities affected by EWE are underexplored. When health systems collapsed during the COVID-19 pandemic in countries spanning income levels, self-care options were prioritised to maintain essential health services. In this commentary, we explore how SRHR self-care interventions and actions can be integrated into EWE emergency preparedness across dimensions of self-management, self-testing, and self-awareness to build individual, community and health systems climate resilience.
期刊介绍:
Global Public Health is an essential peer-reviewed journal that energetically engages with key public health issues that have come to the fore in the global environment — mounting inequalities between rich and poor; the globalization of trade; new patterns of travel and migration; epidemics of newly-emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases; the HIV/AIDS pandemic; the increase in chronic illnesses; escalating pressure on public health infrastructures around the world; and the growing range and scale of conflict situations, terrorist threats, environmental pressures, natural and human-made disasters.