强调媒体宣传气候变化对药用植物影响的跨学科合作:来自内容分析的证据和行动建议

Bernard Appiah , Isaac Kingsley Amponsah , Md Koushik Ahmed , Gursimar Kaur Singh , Merlin Lincoln Kwao Mensah
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引用次数: 1

摘要

药用植物长期以来一直是人类医疗保健系统的一部分。在世界卫生组织(世卫组织)所有区域中,至少有80%的人口报告使用草药。因此,由于气候变化而无法获得药用植物可能会对全球卫生保健系统产生破坏性影响。尽管2017年一份关于健康与气候变化的里程碑式报告承认了大众媒体在应对气候变化和健康挑战方面的作用,但媒体对气候危机及其对药用植物的相关影响的报道似乎缺乏。为了评估媒体对非洲、亚洲和中东三个地区因气候变化导致药用植物灭绝的报道,我们进行了报纸内容分析,并从2008年至2021年发表的198篇文章中筛选出19篇符合条件的报纸文章。我们还对同一时期发表在同行评议期刊上的研究进行了系统搜索,以确定同一时期发表的关于药用植物气候危机的科学论文在多大程度上被分析的报纸文章引用。在确定的478篇论文中,52篇来自亚洲和非洲国家,被认为符合条件。这52篇科学论文中没有一篇被19篇报纸文章引用,这表明关注气候变化导致药用植物灭绝的研究没有在报纸上得到宣传。关于这一主题的报纸文章少得惊人,这可能表明缺乏跨学科倡议、伙伴关系以及包括非洲、亚洲和中东的记者和研究人员在内的利益相关者之间的关系,这些利益相关者致力于强调气候变化如何对药用植物产生负面影响。因此,我们提出了宣传策略,以促进媒体对气候危机及其对药用植物的影响的报道。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Transdisciplinary collaborations to highlight media advocacy on climate change impacts on medicinal plants: Evidence from content analysis, and recommendations for action

Medicinal plants have long been part of the healthcare systems of humanity. At least eighty percent of the population in all World Health Organization (WHO) regions report using herbal medicines. Thus, losing access to medicinal plants from climate change could have a devastating impact on healthcare systems globally. Although the role of the mass media in tackling climate change and health challenges was recognized in a 2017 landmark report on health and climate change, media coverage of the climate crisis and related impacts on medicinal plants appear to be lacking. To assess media coverage of the extinction of medicinal plants due to climate change in three regions — Africa, Asia and Middle East, we conducted a newspaper content analysis, and identified 19 eligible newspaper articles out of 198 articles published from 2008 to 2021. We also conducted a systematic search of studies published in peer-reviewed journals over the same period to determine the extent to which scientific papers on the climate crisis on medicinal plants published over the same period were being cited by the analysed newspaper articles. Of the 478 papers identified, 52 were published from Asian and African countries and were considered eligible. None of the 52 scientific papers were cited by any of the 19 newspaper articles, an indication that studies focusing on medicinal plants’ extinction resulting from climate change were not getting publicity in newspapers. The surprisingly few newspaper articles on the subject may indicate a lack of transdisciplinary initiatives, partnerships, and relationships between stakeholders including journalists and researchers in Africa, Asia and the Middle East working to highlight how climate change is negatively impacting medicinal plants. Therefore, we propose advocacy strategies for promoting media coverage of the climate crisis and its impacts on medicinal plants.

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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
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