Karen Albright is with the Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, and the Denver-Seattle Center of Innovation, Department of Veterans Affairs, Aurora. Pari Shah is with the Graduate School of Social Work, University of Denver, Denver, CO. Melodie Santodomingo is with the Departments of Epidemiology and Community & Behavioral Health, Colorado School of Public Health, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora. Jean Scandlyn is with the Department of Health and Behavioral Sciences and the Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado, Denver.
Am J Public Health. 2020 Aug;110(8):1184-1190. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2020.305723. Epub 2020 Jun 18.
To determine if and how state and local public health departments present information about climate change on their Web sites, their most public-facing platform. We collected data from every functioning state (n = 50), county (n = 2090), and city (n = 585) public health department Web site in the United States in 2019 and 2020. We analyzed data for presence and type of climate-related content and to determine whether there existed clear ways to find climate change information. We analyzed Web sites providing original content about climate change for explanatory or attributional language. Fewer than half (40%) of state health department Web sites, and only 1.6% of county and 3.9% of city Web sites, provided clear ways to find climate change information, whether through provision of original content or links to external agencies' Web sites. Among Web sites providing original content, 48% provided no explanation of climate change causes. National and global public health associations have identified climate change as a public health emergency, but most state and local public health departments are not delivering that message. These departments must be better supported to facilitate dissemination of reliable, scientific information about climate change and its effects on health.
为了确定州和地方公共卫生部门是否以及如何在其网站上展示有关气候变化的信息,这是他们最面向公众的平台。我们于 2019 年和 2020 年从美国每个运作中的州(n=50)、县(n=2090)和市(n=585)公共卫生部门的网站上收集了数据。我们分析了存在的与气候相关的内容的类型,并确定是否有明确的方法可以找到气候变化信息。我们分析了提供有关气候变化的原创内容的网站,以确定是否存在解释或归因语言。只有不到一半(40%)的州卫生部门网站,以及只有 1.6%的县和 3.9%的城市卫生部门网站,提供了明确的方法来查找气候变化信息,无论是通过提供原创内容还是链接到外部机构的网站。在提供原创内容的网站中,有 48%的网站没有解释气候变化的原因。国家和全球公共卫生协会已经将气候变化认定为公共卫生紧急事件,但大多数州和地方公共卫生部门并没有传达这一信息。这些部门必须得到更好的支持,以促进传播有关气候变化及其对健康影响的可靠、科学信息。