适应气候变化:人道主义卫生工作者的战略和观点——一项定性研究

Patricia Nayna Schwerdtle , Carol Devine , Astrid Berner-Rodoreda , Shannon A. McMahon , Kate Bärnighausen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

气候变化正在加剧人道主义卫生危机。然而,在人道主义背景下对气候变化与健康相互影响的研究往往优先考虑了解影响,而不是确定解决办法。本研究采用以解决方案为导向的方法,让从事医疗项目的人道主义工作者探讨现有和潜在的适应战略,以减轻气候变化对健康的不利影响。材料和方法本研究对来自30个国家的无国界医生组织(MSF)的人道主义卫生工作者进行了49次半结构化定性访谈。访谈以英语、法语、西班牙语、葡萄牙语和阿拉伯语进行,重点是确定适应解决方案,以应对个人、社区和组织层面的气候相关健康影响。数据分析使用混合编码方法,结合演绎和归纳技术通知框架分析。结果和讨论该研究强调了被研究国家应对气候变化的高度脆弱性和低准备程度,暴露了适应差距——适应需求与当前努力之间的差距。最初,与会者认为确定适应战略具有挑战性,这些战略往往侧重于缓解(减少排放)而不是适应。根据确定的适应活动,我们开发了一个“适应连续体”框架,范围从适应不良到恢复力建设。此外,我们创建了一个气候变化适应(CCA)示例矩阵,以说明如何在高脆弱性和低适应能力的背景下解决健康风险。卫生和人道主义行为体正在目睹气候变化对世界各地社区和项目的深刻影响。尽管正在努力适应,但对于如何有效实施这些倡议仍然缺乏协商一致意见。本研究介绍了“适应连续体”,这是一个概念框架,旨在指导四个关键领域的适应活动的规划、实施和评估:知识和意识、基础设施和技术解决方案、业务适应以及政策和宣传。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Adapting to climate change: strategies and perspectives from humanitarian health workers – A qualitative study

Introduction

Climate change is contributing to humanitarian health crises. However, research on the intersection of climate change and health in humanitarian settings often prioritises understanding impacts over identifying solutions. This study adopts a solutions-oriented approach, engaging humanitarians working in medical projects to explore both existing and potential adaptation strategies to mitigate the adverse health effects of climate change.

Materials and Methods

The study involved 49 semi-structured qualitative interviews with humanitarian health workers from Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) across 30 countries. Conducted in English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Arabic, the interviews focused on identifying adaptation solutions to address climate-related health impacts at individual, community, and organizational levels. Data were analysed using a hybrid coding approach, combining deductive and inductive techniques informed by framework analysis.

Results and Discussion

The research highlights a perception of high vulnerability and low readiness to address climate change in the studied countries, exposing an adaptation gap—the disparity between adaptation needs and current efforts. Initially, participants found it challenging to identify adaptation strategies, often focussing on mitigation (emission reduction) rather than adaptation. From the adaptation activities identified, we developed an ‘Adaptation Continuum’ framework, which ranges from maladaptation to resilience-building. Additionally, we created a matrix of climate change adaptation (CCA) examples to illustrate how health risks can be addressed in contexts characterised by high vulnerability and low adaptive capacity.

Conclusion

Health and humanitarian actors are witnessing the profound impacts of climate change on communities and projects worldwide. Despite ongoing efforts to adapt, there remains a lack of consensus on how to effectively operationalize these initiatives. This research introduces the ‘Adaptation Continuum’, a conceptual framework designed to guide the planning, implementation, and evaluation of adaptation activities in four key domains: knowledge and awareness, infrastructure and technological solutions, operational adaptation, and policy and advocacy.
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来源期刊
The journal of climate change and health
The journal of climate change and health Global and Planetary Change, Public Health and Health Policy
CiteScore
4.80
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