将气候变化作为国家卫生优先事项:澳大利亚首个国家健康与气候战略。

IF 6.7 2区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Georgia Behrens, Madeleine Skellern, Alice McGushin, Paul Kelly, The Hon Ged Kearney
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With an average of 1.51°C of warming since records began,<span><sup>1</sup></span> the health impacts of climate change are already being felt across Australia.<span><sup>2</sup></span> Meanwhile, the health system itself is responsible, either directly or indirectly, for around 5.3% of Australia's greenhouse gas emissions.<span><sup>3</sup></span> There is a clear need for Australia to achieve “healthy, climate-resilient communities, and a sustainable, resilient, high-quality, net zero health system.”<span><sup>3</sup></span> This vision is outlined in Australia's first National Health and Climate Strategy (hereafter, the Strategy), proudly launched in December 2023 by the Honourable Ged Kearney MP, Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care. In this perspective article, we review the Strategy's origins, development, and key features; discuss the challenges that must be tackled in the coming years; and highlight the leadership role that health professionals can play in the response to climate change.</p><p>The National Health and Climate Strategy is built on decades of outstanding Australian work on climate change and human health. Australians have been at the forefront of climate and health research for more than thirty years, and have been pioneers in drawing the global health community's collective attention to the impacts of climate change on human health and wellbeing. We acknowledge the many individuals and organisations who have persistently advocated for human and planetary health for over a decade, and welcome their ongoing contributions and leadership in this space.<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span></p><p>Consultation also highlighted the need to enable and embrace leadership on climate and health policy by First Nations people. Stakeholders spoke of the opportunities inherent in holistic partnerships with First Nations communities to improve health, reduce emissions and foster climate resilience. They also highlighted that First Nations peoples’ deep and nuanced knowledge — developed over tens of thousands of years of close observation and sustained custodianship of Country — is not only crucial in addressing the impacts of climate change on First Nations peoples’ health, but also can improve health and build climate resilience for all people in Australia.</p><p>At the heart of the Strategy is an ambitious agenda to transform Australia's health system into one that is sustainable and climate resilient while improving care quality and health outcomes. The Australian Government recognises that insights and leadership from health professionals will be crucial to achieving this agenda.</p><p>On health system decarbonisation, at the time of writing the Australian Government was working to publish baseline emissions estimates for the Australian health system, and to develop a net zero implementation guide for the Australian health system in collaboration with the Monash Sustainable Development Institute and state, territory and local health service partners. In the future, a key focus in our emissions reduction efforts will be supporting the provision of appropriate care and tackling unwarranted variations in care delivery. This will help to ensure that clinical care is of benefit to patients, and to avoid over-investigation, overdiagnosis and overtreatment. The Strategy will also guide work to design interventions — in close collaboration with health professionals and consumers — that reduce emissions while maintaining or improving care quality. Fortunately, improving care quality and reducing emissions often go hand in hand. For example, improving objective diagnosis of asthma, education on inhaler technique, and increasing use of preventive inhalers can help to improve health outcomes while reducing emissions from respiratory inhalers containing greenhouse gases.<span><sup>6</sup></span></p><p>On health system resilience, the Strategy recognises the need to build capacity to anticipate, understand, plan for, and respond to escalating climate impacts on health, wellbeing, and delivery of care. At a national level, this will involve an in-depth consideration of climate impacts on health and health systems as part of the National Climate Risk Assessment, and development of a Health National Adaptation Plan to provide an overarching framework for nationally consistent health-related adaptation. The Australian Government is also developing guidance and tools to support health system climate risk assessments and adaptation planning at a local level.</p><p>In addition, a voluntary pilot of new safety and quality standards on environmental sustainability and climate resilience for health service organisations is currently being administered by the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality Health Care.<span><sup>7</sup></span> The pilot aims to help embed the principles of environmental sustainability and climate resilience in care delivery and governance, and will inform the next edition of the National Safety and Quality Health Service Standards, which is due for release in 2027.</p><p>Crucially, the Strategy reaches beyond the traditional confines of the health system, and seeks to promote health, sustainability and climate resilience across a variety of health-determining sectors. Many of the negative impacts of climate change on health will occur via impacts on the wider determinants of health, so it is critical that policies to ameliorate health impacts encompass these upstream drivers. Further, as measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from sectors beyond the health system will have significant health co-benefits, there is an important role for the health sector to ensure these co-benefits are considered in policy and decision making. We hope the Strategy will provide a platform from which to ensure that the health co-benefits of emissions-reducing policies are considered and accounted for in the years ahead.</p><p>The Strategy's Health in All Policies approach is embodied in a wide range of cross-government initiatives at the intersection of climate change and human health planned for the years ahead. For example, in recognition that housing is a key determinant of health and wellbeing, the Strategy includes a commitment to consider the health benefits of climate-resilient housing in developing the National Housing and Homelessness Plan. Given that population health would be improved markedly by widespread uptake of more environmentally sustainable diets,<span><sup>8</sup></span> work is underway with the National Health and Medical Research Council to consider sustainability in the updated Australian Dietary Guidelines. The built environment is an important source of health systems emissions, and also a strong mediator of climate impacts on health, so the Strategy will promote the consideration of health and climate resilience in future updates to the National Construction Code.</p><p>In her speech launching the Strategy at the 28th Conference of the Parties (COP28), Assistant Minister Kearney noted that its release, “highlights a beginning, and ahead of us lies the journey of delivering its ambitious program of work.”<span><sup>9</sup></span> In 2024, the National Health, Sustainability and Climate Unit has taken some of the first steps on that journey. Work has commenced on 31 of the 49 actions within the Strategy, with 12 of those 31 actions completed or in the final stages of completion. Planning has also commenced to deliver a further 14 actions.</p><p>In addition to publishing baseline health system emissions estimates, the Australian Government will shortly be publishing new academic research about opportunities to reduce waste and make food more sustainable in the Australian health system. We have also been working with industry, clinicians, patients and other stakeholders to reduce emissions from respiratory inhalers and anaesthetic gases. Several state health systems have already shown leadership by removing the high emissions anaesthetic gas desflurane from their medicines formularies, while organisations such as Asthma Australia and the National Asthma Council have laid the groundwork for optimising asthma inhaler use for better asthma and climate outcomes, including with the National Sustainable Asthma Care Roadmap.<span><sup>10</sup></span> Meanwhile, the interim Australian Centre for Disease Control, the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Healthcare, and the Council of Presidents of Medical Colleges have released a joint statement in which they agreed to work together to develop low-emissions models of care, and to mobilise and support the health workforce to lead the health system response to climate change.<span><sup>11</sup></span></p><p>In implementing the Strategy, we expect to encounter challenges. These challenges include the need to resist siloed thinking and working to make the Strategy's Health in All Policies approach a practical reality. To help achieve this, we have established governance structures that will support multidisciplinary, cross-portfolio collaboration to deliver the Strategy's vision. Another key challenge will be achieving an appropriate level of national and international consistency, while also balancing the unique needs and circumstances of different jurisdictions. Many states, territories and local governments have led the way in health system decarbonisation and climate resilience to date. In implementing the Strategy, we will be looking to learn from and build on their innovation and progress, and seeking to add value to existing approaches.</p><p>A key domain for Commonwealth leadership will be supporting international collaboration, particularly in areas that require changes to global supply chains and manufacturing practices. On Earth Day this year, the Australian Government announced that it has joined a collaboration with the United States and United Kingdom to align health system procurement standards to support decarbonisation.<span><sup>12</sup></span> Commitment to this collaboration was reiterated at COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan.<span><sup>13</sup></span> Australia is also engaged with efforts to develop new international standards for measuring the environmental impacts of health technology products.</p><p>Frontline clinicians were instrumental in the Strategy's development, and will be even more crucial in its implementation. A net zero, climate-resilient health system must have as its bedrock a motivated, innovative, and upskilled workforce, that can translate the Strategy's vision and objectives into reality on the ground. Achieving such transformative change will require effective coupling of “top-down”, government-led initiatives with “bottom-up” innovation and reform.</p><p>The Strategy highlights a few examples of clinician-led initiatives that have already achieved exceptional outcomes for patients and the planet, and embody the creativity, care and collaboration that will be needed in the years ahead. For example, a team in the Royal Melbourne Hospital Emergency Department implemented a campaign to reduce unnecessary arterial blood gas and coagulation profile testing, which resulted in over 1200 unnecessary blood tests being avoided each month, with annual cost savings of $240 000 and emissions reductions of 900 kg carbon dioxide equivalent (CO<sub>2</sub>e).<span><sup>3</sup></span> We heard about dozens of inspiring frontline initiatives — and even more exciting ideas — such as this throughout Strategy consultations, and aim to support those on the frontlines to consolidate and expand their outstanding work. We have been impressed and inspired by clinicians’ incredible passion for addressing climate change, and will work to support their longstanding, vital leadership towards a net zero, climate-resilient health system in the years ahead.</p><p>The National Health and Climate Strategy sets an ambitious strategic direction for climate change and health policy in Australia. The Australian Government will lead the implementation of the Strategy over the next five years, and continue to pursue the Strategy's vision of “healthy, climate-resilient communities, and a sustainable, resilient, high-quality, net zero health system” over the coming decades. This work is a shared responsibility of every health professional and every part of the health system. We look forward to working collaboratively with stakeholders, including frontline health practitioners, to realise this vision in the years ahead.</p><p>The Hon Ged Kearney MP is Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care and Assistant Minister for Indigenous Health. Professor Kelly has recently retired as the Chief Medical Officer and Head of the Interim Australian Centre for Disease Control within the Department of Health and Aged Care. Dr Skellern is Director and Drs Behrens and McGushin are Assistant Directors of the National Health, Sustainability and Climate Unit within the Department of Health and Aged Care.</p><p>Not commissioned; not externally peer reviewed.</p>","PeriodicalId":18214,"journal":{"name":"Medical Journal of Australia","volume":"222 2","pages":"63-65"},"PeriodicalIF":6.7000,"publicationDate":"2024-12-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.5694/mja2.52552","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Making climate change a national health priority: Australia's first National Health and Climate Strategy\",\"authors\":\"Georgia Behrens,&nbsp;Madeleine Skellern,&nbsp;Alice McGushin,&nbsp;Paul Kelly,&nbsp;The Hon Ged Kearney\",\"doi\":\"10.5694/mja2.52552\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Climate change poses profound and urgent challenges to the health and wellbeing of people in Australia. With an average of 1.51°C of warming since records began,<span><sup>1</sup></span> the health impacts of climate change are already being felt across Australia.<span><sup>2</sup></span> Meanwhile, the health system itself is responsible, either directly or indirectly, for around 5.3% of Australia's greenhouse gas emissions.<span><sup>3</sup></span> There is a clear need for Australia to achieve “healthy, climate-resilient communities, and a sustainable, resilient, high-quality, net zero health system.”<span><sup>3</sup></span> This vision is outlined in Australia's first National Health and Climate Strategy (hereafter, the Strategy), proudly launched in December 2023 by the Honourable Ged Kearney MP, Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care. In this perspective article, we review the Strategy's origins, development, and key features; discuss the challenges that must be tackled in the coming years; and highlight the leadership role that health professionals can play in the response to climate change.</p><p>The National Health and Climate Strategy is built on decades of outstanding Australian work on climate change and human health. Australians have been at the forefront of climate and health research for more than thirty years, and have been pioneers in drawing the global health community's collective attention to the impacts of climate change on human health and wellbeing. We acknowledge the many individuals and organisations who have persistently advocated for human and planetary health for over a decade, and welcome their ongoing contributions and leadership in this space.<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span></p><p>Consultation also highlighted the need to enable and embrace leadership on climate and health policy by First Nations people. Stakeholders spoke of the opportunities inherent in holistic partnerships with First Nations communities to improve health, reduce emissions and foster climate resilience. They also highlighted that First Nations peoples’ deep and nuanced knowledge — developed over tens of thousands of years of close observation and sustained custodianship of Country — is not only crucial in addressing the impacts of climate change on First Nations peoples’ health, but also can improve health and build climate resilience for all people in Australia.</p><p>At the heart of the Strategy is an ambitious agenda to transform Australia's health system into one that is sustainable and climate resilient while improving care quality and health outcomes. The Australian Government recognises that insights and leadership from health professionals will be crucial to achieving this agenda.</p><p>On health system decarbonisation, at the time of writing the Australian Government was working to publish baseline emissions estimates for the Australian health system, and to develop a net zero implementation guide for the Australian health system in collaboration with the Monash Sustainable Development Institute and state, territory and local health service partners. In the future, a key focus in our emissions reduction efforts will be supporting the provision of appropriate care and tackling unwarranted variations in care delivery. This will help to ensure that clinical care is of benefit to patients, and to avoid over-investigation, overdiagnosis and overtreatment. The Strategy will also guide work to design interventions — in close collaboration with health professionals and consumers — that reduce emissions while maintaining or improving care quality. Fortunately, improving care quality and reducing emissions often go hand in hand. For example, improving objective diagnosis of asthma, education on inhaler technique, and increasing use of preventive inhalers can help to improve health outcomes while reducing emissions from respiratory inhalers containing greenhouse gases.<span><sup>6</sup></span></p><p>On health system resilience, the Strategy recognises the need to build capacity to anticipate, understand, plan for, and respond to escalating climate impacts on health, wellbeing, and delivery of care. At a national level, this will involve an in-depth consideration of climate impacts on health and health systems as part of the National Climate Risk Assessment, and development of a Health National Adaptation Plan to provide an overarching framework for nationally consistent health-related adaptation. The Australian Government is also developing guidance and tools to support health system climate risk assessments and adaptation planning at a local level.</p><p>In addition, a voluntary pilot of new safety and quality standards on environmental sustainability and climate resilience for health service organisations is currently being administered by the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality Health Care.<span><sup>7</sup></span> The pilot aims to help embed the principles of environmental sustainability and climate resilience in care delivery and governance, and will inform the next edition of the National Safety and Quality Health Service Standards, which is due for release in 2027.</p><p>Crucially, the Strategy reaches beyond the traditional confines of the health system, and seeks to promote health, sustainability and climate resilience across a variety of health-determining sectors. Many of the negative impacts of climate change on health will occur via impacts on the wider determinants of health, so it is critical that policies to ameliorate health impacts encompass these upstream drivers. Further, as measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from sectors beyond the health system will have significant health co-benefits, there is an important role for the health sector to ensure these co-benefits are considered in policy and decision making. We hope the Strategy will provide a platform from which to ensure that the health co-benefits of emissions-reducing policies are considered and accounted for in the years ahead.</p><p>The Strategy's Health in All Policies approach is embodied in a wide range of cross-government initiatives at the intersection of climate change and human health planned for the years ahead. For example, in recognition that housing is a key determinant of health and wellbeing, the Strategy includes a commitment to consider the health benefits of climate-resilient housing in developing the National Housing and Homelessness Plan. Given that population health would be improved markedly by widespread uptake of more environmentally sustainable diets,<span><sup>8</sup></span> work is underway with the National Health and Medical Research Council to consider sustainability in the updated Australian Dietary Guidelines. The built environment is an important source of health systems emissions, and also a strong mediator of climate impacts on health, so the Strategy will promote the consideration of health and climate resilience in future updates to the National Construction Code.</p><p>In her speech launching the Strategy at the 28th Conference of the Parties (COP28), Assistant Minister Kearney noted that its release, “highlights a beginning, and ahead of us lies the journey of delivering its ambitious program of work.”<span><sup>9</sup></span> In 2024, the National Health, Sustainability and Climate Unit has taken some of the first steps on that journey. Work has commenced on 31 of the 49 actions within the Strategy, with 12 of those 31 actions completed or in the final stages of completion. Planning has also commenced to deliver a further 14 actions.</p><p>In addition to publishing baseline health system emissions estimates, the Australian Government will shortly be publishing new academic research about opportunities to reduce waste and make food more sustainable in the Australian health system. We have also been working with industry, clinicians, patients and other stakeholders to reduce emissions from respiratory inhalers and anaesthetic gases. Several state health systems have already shown leadership by removing the high emissions anaesthetic gas desflurane from their medicines formularies, while organisations such as Asthma Australia and the National Asthma Council have laid the groundwork for optimising asthma inhaler use for better asthma and climate outcomes, including with the National Sustainable Asthma Care Roadmap.<span><sup>10</sup></span> Meanwhile, the interim Australian Centre for Disease Control, the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Healthcare, and the Council of Presidents of Medical Colleges have released a joint statement in which they agreed to work together to develop low-emissions models of care, and to mobilise and support the health workforce to lead the health system response to climate change.<span><sup>11</sup></span></p><p>In implementing the Strategy, we expect to encounter challenges. These challenges include the need to resist siloed thinking and working to make the Strategy's Health in All Policies approach a practical reality. To help achieve this, we have established governance structures that will support multidisciplinary, cross-portfolio collaboration to deliver the Strategy's vision. Another key challenge will be achieving an appropriate level of national and international consistency, while also balancing the unique needs and circumstances of different jurisdictions. Many states, territories and local governments have led the way in health system decarbonisation and climate resilience to date. In implementing the Strategy, we will be looking to learn from and build on their innovation and progress, and seeking to add value to existing approaches.</p><p>A key domain for Commonwealth leadership will be supporting international collaboration, particularly in areas that require changes to global supply chains and manufacturing practices. On Earth Day this year, the Australian Government announced that it has joined a collaboration with the United States and United Kingdom to align health system procurement standards to support decarbonisation.<span><sup>12</sup></span> Commitment to this collaboration was reiterated at COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan.<span><sup>13</sup></span> Australia is also engaged with efforts to develop new international standards for measuring the environmental impacts of health technology products.</p><p>Frontline clinicians were instrumental in the Strategy's development, and will be even more crucial in its implementation. A net zero, climate-resilient health system must have as its bedrock a motivated, innovative, and upskilled workforce, that can translate the Strategy's vision and objectives into reality on the ground. Achieving such transformative change will require effective coupling of “top-down”, government-led initiatives with “bottom-up” innovation and reform.</p><p>The Strategy highlights a few examples of clinician-led initiatives that have already achieved exceptional outcomes for patients and the planet, and embody the creativity, care and collaboration that will be needed in the years ahead. For example, a team in the Royal Melbourne Hospital Emergency Department implemented a campaign to reduce unnecessary arterial blood gas and coagulation profile testing, which resulted in over 1200 unnecessary blood tests being avoided each month, with annual cost savings of $240 000 and emissions reductions of 900 kg carbon dioxide equivalent (CO<sub>2</sub>e).<span><sup>3</sup></span> We heard about dozens of inspiring frontline initiatives — and even more exciting ideas — such as this throughout Strategy consultations, and aim to support those on the frontlines to consolidate and expand their outstanding work. We have been impressed and inspired by clinicians’ incredible passion for addressing climate change, and will work to support their longstanding, vital leadership towards a net zero, climate-resilient health system in the years ahead.</p><p>The National Health and Climate Strategy sets an ambitious strategic direction for climate change and health policy in Australia. The Australian Government will lead the implementation of the Strategy over the next five years, and continue to pursue the Strategy's vision of “healthy, climate-resilient communities, and a sustainable, resilient, high-quality, net zero health system” over the coming decades. This work is a shared responsibility of every health professional and every part of the health system. We look forward to working collaboratively with stakeholders, including frontline health practitioners, to realise this vision in the years ahead.</p><p>The Hon Ged Kearney MP is Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care and Assistant Minister for Indigenous Health. Professor Kelly has recently retired as the Chief Medical Officer and Head of the Interim Australian Centre for Disease Control within the Department of Health and Aged Care. Dr Skellern is Director and Drs Behrens and McGushin are Assistant Directors of the National Health, Sustainability and Climate Unit within the Department of Health and Aged Care.</p><p>Not commissioned; not externally peer reviewed.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":18214,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Medical Journal of Australia\",\"volume\":\"222 2\",\"pages\":\"63-65\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":6.7000,\"publicationDate\":\"2024-12-15\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.5694/mja2.52552\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Medical Journal of Australia\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"3\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.5694/mja2.52552\",\"RegionNum\":2,\"RegionCategory\":\"医学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Medical Journal of Australia","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.5694/mja2.52552","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
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摘要

气候变化对澳大利亚人民的健康和福祉构成了深刻而紧迫的挑战。自有记录以来,平均气温上升了1.51°C,澳大利亚各地已经感受到气候变化对健康的影响。与此同时,澳大利亚约5.3%的温室气体排放都是由卫生系统直接或间接造成的澳大利亚显然需要实现“健康的、适应气候变化的社区,以及可持续的、适应气候变化的、高质量的、净零卫生系统”。3这一愿景在澳大利亚首个《国家卫生和气候战略》(以下简称《战略》)中得到了概述,该战略于2023年12月由卫生和老年护理部长助理、尊敬的国会议员格德·科尔尼(Ged Kearney)自豪地推出。在这篇透视文章中,我们回顾了该战略的起源、发展和主要特征;讨论未来几年必须解决的挑战;并强调卫生专业人员在应对气候变化方面可以发挥的领导作用。《国家卫生和气候战略》建立在澳大利亚几十年来在气候变化和人类健康方面的杰出工作基础之上。30多年来,澳大利亚人一直站在气候和健康研究的前沿,并一直是吸引全球卫生界集体关注气候变化对人类健康和福祉影响的先驱。我们感谢十多年来坚持倡导人类和地球健康的许多个人和组织,并欢迎他们在这一领域继续作出贡献和发挥领导作用。45 .协商还强调,需要由第一民族人民在气候和卫生政策方面发挥领导作用。利益攸关方谈到了与第一民族社区建立全面伙伴关系所固有的机会,以改善健康、减少排放和增强气候适应能力。他们还强调,第一民族在数万年对国家的密切观察和持续监护中积累的深刻而细致的知识,不仅对解决气候变化对第一民族健康的影响至关重要,而且可以改善澳大利亚所有人的健康和建立气候适应能力。该战略的核心是一项雄心勃勃的议程,旨在将澳大利亚的卫生系统转变为可持续和适应气候变化的系统,同时提高护理质量和健康结果。澳大利亚政府认识到,卫生专业人员的见解和领导对实现这一议程至关重要。在卫生系统脱碳方面,在撰写本文时,澳大利亚政府正在努力公布澳大利亚卫生系统的基线排放估计,并与莫纳什可持续发展研究所以及州、地区和地方卫生服务合作伙伴合作,为澳大利亚卫生系统制定净零实施指南。未来,我们减排工作的一个重点将是支持提供适当的医疗服务,并解决医疗服务中不合理的变化。这将有助于确保临床护理对患者有益,并避免过度调查,过度诊断和过度治疗。该战略还将指导与卫生专业人员和消费者密切合作设计干预措施的工作,以减少排放,同时保持或改善护理质量。幸运的是,提高护理质量和减少排放往往是齐头并进的。例如,改进哮喘的客观诊断、对吸入器技术进行教育以及增加预防性吸入器的使用,可有助于改善健康结果,同时减少含有温室气体的呼吸吸入器的排放。6 .在卫生系统复原力方面,《战略》认识到需要建设能力,以预测、理解、规划和应对气候对健康、福祉和提供保健的不断升级的影响。在国家一级,这将涉及深入审议气候对健康和卫生系统的影响,作为国家气候风险评估的一部分,并制定卫生国家适应计划,为国家一致的健康相关适应提供总体框架。澳大利亚政府还在制定指导和工具,以支持地方一级的卫生系统气候风险评估和适应规划。此外,澳大利亚安全和优质保健委员会目前正在为保健服务组织管理一项关于环境可持续性和气候适应能力的新安全和质量标准自愿试点。7该试点旨在帮助将环境可持续性和气候适应能力原则纳入保健服务和治理,并将为下一版《国家安全和质量保健服务标准》提供参考。这部电影将于2027年上映。 至关重要的是,该战略超出了卫生系统的传统范围,并寻求在各种卫生决定部门促进健康、可持续性和气候适应能力。气候变化对健康的许多负面影响将通过对更广泛的健康决定因素的影响而发生,因此,改善健康影响的政策必须包括这些上游驱动因素。此外,由于减少卫生系统以外部门温室气体排放的措施将产生重大的卫生协同效益,卫生部门在确保政策和决策中考虑到这些协同效益方面发挥着重要作用。我们希望该战略将提供一个平台,以确保在今后几年中考虑和考虑减少排放政策对健康的共同利益。《战略》的“将健康纳入所有政策”方针体现在为今后几年规划的气候变化与人类健康交叉领域的一系列广泛的跨政府倡议中。例如,认识到住房是健康和福祉的关键决定因素,《战略》承诺在制定《国家住房和无家可归计划》时考虑到适应气候变化的住房对健康的益处。鉴于广泛采用更具环境可持续性的饮食将显著改善人口健康,8国家卫生和医学研究委员会正在开展工作,在更新的《澳大利亚膳食指南》中考虑可持续性。建筑环境是卫生系统排放的一个重要来源,也是气候对健康影响的一个强有力的中介,因此该战略将促进在未来修订《国家建筑规范》时考虑健康和气候适应能力。科尔尼助理部长在《气候变化框架公约》第28次缔约方会议上发表启动该战略的讲话时指出,该战略的发布“标志着一个开端,摆在我们面前的是实现其雄心勃勃的工作计划的旅程。“2024年,国家卫生、可持续发展和气候股在这一旅程中迈出了一些初步步骤。战略内49项行动中的31项已开始工作,这31项行动中有12项已完成或处于完成的最后阶段。另外14项行动也已开始规划。除了发布基线卫生系统排放估计外,澳大利亚政府将很快发布关于在澳大利亚卫生系统中减少浪费和使食品更具可持续性的机会的新学术研究。我们还一直与行业、临床医生、患者和其他利益相关者合作,减少呼吸吸入器和麻醉气体的排放。一些州的卫生系统已经通过从他们的药物处方中删除高排放麻醉气体地氟醚显示出了领导作用,而诸如澳大利亚哮喘协会和国家哮喘委员会等组织已经为优化哮喘吸入器的使用奠定了基础,以更好地改善哮喘和气候结果,包括国家可持续哮喘护理路线图。澳大利亚卫生保健安全和质量委员会和医学院校长理事会发布了一份联合声明,同意共同努力开发低排放的医疗模式,并动员和支持卫生工作者领导卫生系统应对气候变化。11在实施《战略》的过程中,我们预料会遇到挑战。这些挑战包括必须抵制孤立的思维,并努力使该战略的“将健康纳入所有政策”的做法成为现实。为了帮助实现这一目标,我们已经建立了治理结构,它将支持多学科、跨投资组合的协作,以交付战略的愿景。另一项关键挑战将是实现适当程度的国家和国际一致性,同时还要平衡不同司法管辖区的独特需要和情况。迄今为止,许多州、地区和地方政府在卫生系统脱碳和气候适应能力方面处于领先地位。在实施该战略的过程中,我们将学习和借鉴他们的创新和进步,并寻求为现有方法增加价值。英联邦领导的一个关键领域将是支持国际合作,特别是在需要改变全球供应链和制造实践的领域。在今年的地球日,澳大利亚政府宣布,它已加入与美国和联合王国的合作,使卫生系统采购标准保持一致,以支持脱碳在阿塞拜疆巴库举行的第29届联合国气候变化大会上重申了对这一合作的承诺。 13 .澳大利亚还致力于制定新的国际标准,以衡量保健技术产品对环境的影响。一线临床医生在该战略的制定过程中发挥了重要作用,在实施过程中将更加重要。一个具有气候适应能力的净零排放卫生系统必须拥有一支积极进取、创新和技能提高的工作队伍,能够将战略的愿景和目标转化为现实。实现这种变革需要“自上而下”、政府主导的举措与“自下而上”的创新和改革有效结合。该战略强调了几个由临床医生主导的举措的例子,这些举措已经为患者和地球取得了非凡的成果,体现了未来几年所需的创造力、关怀和协作。例如,皇家墨尔本医院急诊科的一个小组开展了一项运动,以减少不必要的动脉血气和凝血分析测试,结果每月避免了1200多次不必要的血液测试,每年节省成本24万美元,减少排放900公斤二氧化碳当量(CO2e)在整个战略咨询过程中,我们听到了数十个鼓舞人心的前线倡议,甚至是更令人兴奋的想法,这些倡议旨在支持前线人员巩固和扩大他们的杰出工作。临床医生对应对气候变化的惊人热情给我们留下了深刻印象和启发,我们将努力支持他们在未来几年实现净零、气候适应型卫生系统的长期重要领导作用。《国家卫生和气候战略》为澳大利亚的气候变化和卫生政策确定了雄心勃勃的战略方向。澳大利亚政府将在未来五年领导实施该战略,并在未来几十年继续追求该战略的愿景,即“健康、适应气候变化的社区,以及可持续、适应气候变化的高质量、净零卫生系统”。这项工作是每个卫生专业人员和卫生系统每个部分的共同责任。我们期待着与包括一线卫生从业人员在内的利益攸关方合作,在未来几年实现这一愿景。格德·科尔尼议员是卫生和老年护理助理部长和土著卫生助理部长。凯利教授最近从首席医疗官和卫生和老年护理部临时澳大利亚疾病控制中心主任的职位上退休。Skellern博士是卫生和老年护理部国家卫生、可持续发展和气候部门的主任,Behrens博士和McGushin博士是该部门的助理主任。不是委托;没有外部同行评审。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Making climate change a national health priority: Australia's first National Health and Climate Strategy

Climate change poses profound and urgent challenges to the health and wellbeing of people in Australia. With an average of 1.51°C of warming since records began,1 the health impacts of climate change are already being felt across Australia.2 Meanwhile, the health system itself is responsible, either directly or indirectly, for around 5.3% of Australia's greenhouse gas emissions.3 There is a clear need for Australia to achieve “healthy, climate-resilient communities, and a sustainable, resilient, high-quality, net zero health system.”3 This vision is outlined in Australia's first National Health and Climate Strategy (hereafter, the Strategy), proudly launched in December 2023 by the Honourable Ged Kearney MP, Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care. In this perspective article, we review the Strategy's origins, development, and key features; discuss the challenges that must be tackled in the coming years; and highlight the leadership role that health professionals can play in the response to climate change.

The National Health and Climate Strategy is built on decades of outstanding Australian work on climate change and human health. Australians have been at the forefront of climate and health research for more than thirty years, and have been pioneers in drawing the global health community's collective attention to the impacts of climate change on human health and wellbeing. We acknowledge the many individuals and organisations who have persistently advocated for human and planetary health for over a decade, and welcome their ongoing contributions and leadership in this space.4, 5

Consultation also highlighted the need to enable and embrace leadership on climate and health policy by First Nations people. Stakeholders spoke of the opportunities inherent in holistic partnerships with First Nations communities to improve health, reduce emissions and foster climate resilience. They also highlighted that First Nations peoples’ deep and nuanced knowledge — developed over tens of thousands of years of close observation and sustained custodianship of Country — is not only crucial in addressing the impacts of climate change on First Nations peoples’ health, but also can improve health and build climate resilience for all people in Australia.

At the heart of the Strategy is an ambitious agenda to transform Australia's health system into one that is sustainable and climate resilient while improving care quality and health outcomes. The Australian Government recognises that insights and leadership from health professionals will be crucial to achieving this agenda.

On health system decarbonisation, at the time of writing the Australian Government was working to publish baseline emissions estimates for the Australian health system, and to develop a net zero implementation guide for the Australian health system in collaboration with the Monash Sustainable Development Institute and state, territory and local health service partners. In the future, a key focus in our emissions reduction efforts will be supporting the provision of appropriate care and tackling unwarranted variations in care delivery. This will help to ensure that clinical care is of benefit to patients, and to avoid over-investigation, overdiagnosis and overtreatment. The Strategy will also guide work to design interventions — in close collaboration with health professionals and consumers — that reduce emissions while maintaining or improving care quality. Fortunately, improving care quality and reducing emissions often go hand in hand. For example, improving objective diagnosis of asthma, education on inhaler technique, and increasing use of preventive inhalers can help to improve health outcomes while reducing emissions from respiratory inhalers containing greenhouse gases.6

On health system resilience, the Strategy recognises the need to build capacity to anticipate, understand, plan for, and respond to escalating climate impacts on health, wellbeing, and delivery of care. At a national level, this will involve an in-depth consideration of climate impacts on health and health systems as part of the National Climate Risk Assessment, and development of a Health National Adaptation Plan to provide an overarching framework for nationally consistent health-related adaptation. The Australian Government is also developing guidance and tools to support health system climate risk assessments and adaptation planning at a local level.

In addition, a voluntary pilot of new safety and quality standards on environmental sustainability and climate resilience for health service organisations is currently being administered by the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality Health Care.7 The pilot aims to help embed the principles of environmental sustainability and climate resilience in care delivery and governance, and will inform the next edition of the National Safety and Quality Health Service Standards, which is due for release in 2027.

Crucially, the Strategy reaches beyond the traditional confines of the health system, and seeks to promote health, sustainability and climate resilience across a variety of health-determining sectors. Many of the negative impacts of climate change on health will occur via impacts on the wider determinants of health, so it is critical that policies to ameliorate health impacts encompass these upstream drivers. Further, as measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from sectors beyond the health system will have significant health co-benefits, there is an important role for the health sector to ensure these co-benefits are considered in policy and decision making. We hope the Strategy will provide a platform from which to ensure that the health co-benefits of emissions-reducing policies are considered and accounted for in the years ahead.

The Strategy's Health in All Policies approach is embodied in a wide range of cross-government initiatives at the intersection of climate change and human health planned for the years ahead. For example, in recognition that housing is a key determinant of health and wellbeing, the Strategy includes a commitment to consider the health benefits of climate-resilient housing in developing the National Housing and Homelessness Plan. Given that population health would be improved markedly by widespread uptake of more environmentally sustainable diets,8 work is underway with the National Health and Medical Research Council to consider sustainability in the updated Australian Dietary Guidelines. The built environment is an important source of health systems emissions, and also a strong mediator of climate impacts on health, so the Strategy will promote the consideration of health and climate resilience in future updates to the National Construction Code.

In her speech launching the Strategy at the 28th Conference of the Parties (COP28), Assistant Minister Kearney noted that its release, “highlights a beginning, and ahead of us lies the journey of delivering its ambitious program of work.”9 In 2024, the National Health, Sustainability and Climate Unit has taken some of the first steps on that journey. Work has commenced on 31 of the 49 actions within the Strategy, with 12 of those 31 actions completed or in the final stages of completion. Planning has also commenced to deliver a further 14 actions.

In addition to publishing baseline health system emissions estimates, the Australian Government will shortly be publishing new academic research about opportunities to reduce waste and make food more sustainable in the Australian health system. We have also been working with industry, clinicians, patients and other stakeholders to reduce emissions from respiratory inhalers and anaesthetic gases. Several state health systems have already shown leadership by removing the high emissions anaesthetic gas desflurane from their medicines formularies, while organisations such as Asthma Australia and the National Asthma Council have laid the groundwork for optimising asthma inhaler use for better asthma and climate outcomes, including with the National Sustainable Asthma Care Roadmap.10 Meanwhile, the interim Australian Centre for Disease Control, the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Healthcare, and the Council of Presidents of Medical Colleges have released a joint statement in which they agreed to work together to develop low-emissions models of care, and to mobilise and support the health workforce to lead the health system response to climate change.11

In implementing the Strategy, we expect to encounter challenges. These challenges include the need to resist siloed thinking and working to make the Strategy's Health in All Policies approach a practical reality. To help achieve this, we have established governance structures that will support multidisciplinary, cross-portfolio collaboration to deliver the Strategy's vision. Another key challenge will be achieving an appropriate level of national and international consistency, while also balancing the unique needs and circumstances of different jurisdictions. Many states, territories and local governments have led the way in health system decarbonisation and climate resilience to date. In implementing the Strategy, we will be looking to learn from and build on their innovation and progress, and seeking to add value to existing approaches.

A key domain for Commonwealth leadership will be supporting international collaboration, particularly in areas that require changes to global supply chains and manufacturing practices. On Earth Day this year, the Australian Government announced that it has joined a collaboration with the United States and United Kingdom to align health system procurement standards to support decarbonisation.12 Commitment to this collaboration was reiterated at COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan.13 Australia is also engaged with efforts to develop new international standards for measuring the environmental impacts of health technology products.

Frontline clinicians were instrumental in the Strategy's development, and will be even more crucial in its implementation. A net zero, climate-resilient health system must have as its bedrock a motivated, innovative, and upskilled workforce, that can translate the Strategy's vision and objectives into reality on the ground. Achieving such transformative change will require effective coupling of “top-down”, government-led initiatives with “bottom-up” innovation and reform.

The Strategy highlights a few examples of clinician-led initiatives that have already achieved exceptional outcomes for patients and the planet, and embody the creativity, care and collaboration that will be needed in the years ahead. For example, a team in the Royal Melbourne Hospital Emergency Department implemented a campaign to reduce unnecessary arterial blood gas and coagulation profile testing, which resulted in over 1200 unnecessary blood tests being avoided each month, with annual cost savings of $240 000 and emissions reductions of 900 kg carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e).3 We heard about dozens of inspiring frontline initiatives — and even more exciting ideas — such as this throughout Strategy consultations, and aim to support those on the frontlines to consolidate and expand their outstanding work. We have been impressed and inspired by clinicians’ incredible passion for addressing climate change, and will work to support their longstanding, vital leadership towards a net zero, climate-resilient health system in the years ahead.

The National Health and Climate Strategy sets an ambitious strategic direction for climate change and health policy in Australia. The Australian Government will lead the implementation of the Strategy over the next five years, and continue to pursue the Strategy's vision of “healthy, climate-resilient communities, and a sustainable, resilient, high-quality, net zero health system” over the coming decades. This work is a shared responsibility of every health professional and every part of the health system. We look forward to working collaboratively with stakeholders, including frontline health practitioners, to realise this vision in the years ahead.

The Hon Ged Kearney MP is Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care and Assistant Minister for Indigenous Health. Professor Kelly has recently retired as the Chief Medical Officer and Head of the Interim Australian Centre for Disease Control within the Department of Health and Aged Care. Dr Skellern is Director and Drs Behrens and McGushin are Assistant Directors of the National Health, Sustainability and Climate Unit within the Department of Health and Aged Care.

Not commissioned; not externally peer reviewed.

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来源期刊
Medical Journal of Australia
Medical Journal of Australia 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
5.30%
发文量
410
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Medical Journal of Australia (MJA) stands as Australia's foremost general medical journal, leading the dissemination of high-quality research and commentary to shape health policy and influence medical practices within the country. Under the leadership of Professor Virginia Barbour, the expert editorial team at MJA is dedicated to providing authors with a constructive and collaborative peer-review and publication process. Established in 1914, the MJA has evolved into a modern journal that upholds its founding values, maintaining a commitment to supporting the medical profession by delivering high-quality and pertinent information essential to medical practice.
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