Division of Hospital Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Arusha Lutheran Medical Centre, Arusha, Tanzania.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2023 Aug 7;109(3):506-510. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.22-0508. Print 2023 Sep 6.
In July 2022, the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene Green Task Force advocated to acknowledge the health impacts of climate change, particularly on those in low- and middle-income countries, and called on global health organizations to act. Simultaneously, academic medical centers are resuming Short-Term Electives in Global Health (STEGH) as travel restrictions imposed during the COVID-19 pandemic ease in most countries. International flights by trainees from academic medical centers in high-income countries (HIC) on these electives encapsulate the climate injustice of who generates carbon emissions and who bears the impacts of climate change. Using "decolonization" and "decarbonization" as guiding principles, we suggest several strategies that global medical education programs in HIC could implement. First, restructure rotations to halt STEGH with minimal benefit to host institutions, optimize trainee activities while abroad, and lengthen rotation duration. Second, programs can calculate the carbon impact of their STEGH and implement concrete measures to cut emissions. Finally, we urge academic medical centers to promote climate-resilient healthcare infrastructure in host countries and advocate for climate solutions on the global stage.
2022 年 7 月,美国热带医学与卫生学会绿色工作组倡导承认气候变化对健康的影响,特别是对中低收入国家的影响,并呼吁全球卫生组织采取行动。与此同时,学术医疗中心正在恢复短期全球卫生选修课程(STEGH),因为大多数国家的 COVID-19 大流行旅行限制已经放宽。来自高收入国家学术医疗中心的受训者在这些选修课程上的国际航班体现了谁产生碳排放以及谁承担气候变化影响的气候不公平。我们以“非殖民化”和“脱碳”为指导原则,提出了一些高收入国家全球医学教育项目可以实施的策略。首先,重构轮转以停止对宿主机构几乎没有好处的 STEGH,优化受训者在国外的活动,并延长轮转时间。其次,项目可以计算 STEGH 的碳影响,并采取具体措施减少排放。最后,我们敦促学术医疗中心在宿主国促进气候适应型医疗基础设施,并在全球舞台上倡导气候解决方案。