参与式模式促进地方和区域在适应气候变化和健康方面的合作

Sarah Harrison , Alexandra Macmillan , Sophie Bond , Janet Stephenson
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引用次数: 1

摘要

与气候变化有关的洪水和海平面上升对健康有重要的直接和间接影响。为了支持健康和公平,适应对策需要在广泛的地方一级利益攸关方之间开展协作、跨学科学习和建立共识。我们的目标是共同发展对健康、健康决定因素、洪水和新西兰奥特罗阿低收入城市地区海平面上升之间复杂相互作用的共同理解,以便为行动提供信息。方法采用定性参与式系统动力学模型,包括与跨学科利益相关者的访谈和小组研讨会。我们开发了一套共享的健康结果,并将参与者的知识与已发表的证据进行三角化,以开发一套因果循环图(CLDs)。这些捕获了洪水和海平面上升以及当地健康和福祉之间的系统反馈行为。33名参与者参与了整个项目,确定了22项健康结果。社区发展计划涵盖六个相互交叉的主题:社区主导的发展和参与决策;住房质量;房地产市场;保险市场;洪水和海平面上升对经济的影响;以及洪水引发的交通问题。确定了干预点,有可能为注重卫生公平的适应政策提供信息。这一过程支持了参与者心理模式向共识和有效干预点的转变,以及跨学科关系的建立。结论参与式系统建模方法可以支持跨部门协作学习,了解当地气候变化适应背景下对健康和福祉的复杂、动态影响。这些共同的、全面的理解对于为促进积极的健康和社会公平结果的决策提供信息至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Participatory modeling for local and regional collaboration on climate change adaptation and health

Introduction

Climate change-related flooding and sea-level rise have important direct and indirect health effects. In order to support health and equity, adaptation responses require collaborative, transdisciplinary learning and consensus-building, across a wide range of local-level stakeholders. We aimed to co-develop a shared understanding of the complex interplay between health, health determinants, flooding, and sea-level rise in a low-income urban area of Aotearoa New Zealand, to inform action.

Methods

We used qualitative participatory system dynamics modeling, involving interviews and group workshops with transdisciplinary stakeholders. We developed a shared set of wellbeing outcomes and triangulated participants’ knowledge with published evidence to develop a set of causal loop diagrams (CLDs). These capture the system feedback behavior between flooding and sea-level rise, and local health and wellbeing.

Results

Thirty-three participants were involved across the project, identifying 22 wellbeing outcomes. The CLDs covered six intersecting themes: community-led development and participation in decision-making; quality of housing; the housing market; the insurance market; economic effects of flooding and sea-level rise; and access issues arising from flooding. Intervention points were identified, with the potential to inform health equity-focused adaptation policy. The process supported shifts in participants’ mental models towards consensus and effective intervention points, and transdisciplinary relationship-building.

Conclusion

Participatory systems modeling approaches may support cross-sector collaborative learning about the complex, dynamic influences on health and wellbeing in the context of local climate change adaptation. These shared, holistic understandings are essential to inform decision-making that promotes positive health and social equity outcomes.

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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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