Paul J. Schramm (
Angelica L. Al Janabi is a public health project coordinator in the Climate Ready Tribes Initiative at the National Indian Health Board, in Washington, D.C.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2020 Dec;39(12):2153-2159. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2020.00997.
Climate change directly threatens human health, with substantial impacts on Indigenous peoples, who are uniquely vulnerable as climate-related events affect their practices, lifeways, self-determination, and physical and cultural health. At the same time, Indigenous communities are leading the way in innovative health-related climate change adaptation work, using traditional knowledges and novel approaches. In 2016 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Indian Health Board created the Climate-Ready Tribes Initiative to support these efforts. The initiative has funded tribes, shared information nationally, and supported a learning cohort, resulting in pioneering work to protect health from climate hazards. We describe how two tribes-the Pala Band of Mission Indians and the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community-implemented their Climate-Ready Tribes Initiative projects, and we provide recommendations for making climate and health policy more effective for tribes. Lessons learned from the Climate-Ready Tribes Initiative can inform climate and health policy and practice nationwide.
气候变化直接威胁人类健康,对原住民造成重大影响,由于与气候相关的事件影响到他们的实践、生活方式、自决以及身心健康,原住民特别容易受到影响。与此同时,原住民社区在创新性的与健康相关的气候变化适应工作方面处于领先地位,利用传统知识和新方法。2016 年,疾病控制与预防中心和全国印第安人健康委员会创建了气候适应部落倡议,以支持这些努力。该倡议为部落提供资金,在全国范围内共享信息,并支持学习群体,从而开展了开创性的工作,以保护健康免受气候危害。我们描述了两个部落——使命印第安人帕拉部落和斯瓦诺米什部落社区如何实施他们的气候适应部落倡议项目,并为使部落的气候和健康政策更加有效提供了建议。气候适应部落倡议的经验教训可以为全国的气候和健康政策及实践提供信息。