Okatch Harriet, Remshifski Patricia A, Fennessey Anita, Campbell Haley, Barnoy Sivia, Friedman Jason, Kern Stephen B, Frasso Rosemary, Sorensen Cecilia, Bar-Shalita Tami, Hunter Louis N
Jefferson College of Population Health, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Department of Speech-Language Pathology, Jefferson College of Rehabilitation Sciences, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Front Med (Lausanne). 2024 Aug 16;11:1438609. doi: 10.3389/fmed.2024.1438609. eCollection 2024.
To address the health effects of climate change, leaders in healthcare have called for action to integrate climate adaptation and mitigation into training programs for health professionals. However, current educators may not possess sufficient climate literacy and the expertise to effectively include such content in their respective healthcare curricula. We, an international and interprofessional partnership, collaborated with experts to develop and deploy curriculum to increase health educators' and graduate health profession students' knowledge and competencies on climate change. In a tri-step process, the first phase included recruiting interested faculty members from two institutions and varying health professions. In phase two, faculty members collaborated to develop a faculty symposium on climate change including educational competencies required of health professions, practice standards, guidelines, and profession-specific content. Symposium outcomes included broader faculty member interest and commitment to create an interprofessional climate change course for healthcare graduate students. In phase three, course development resulted from collaboration between faculty members at the two institutions and faculty members from the Global Consortium on Climate and Health Education (GCCHE), with course objectives informed by GCCHE competencies. Climate experts and faculty members delivered the course content over a 10-week period to 30 faculty members and students representing seven health professions, who were surveyed (n = 13) for feedback. This course can serve as an example for international collaborators interested in developing climate change courses for health profession students. Lessons learned in this process include: climate change novice faculty members can develop impactful climate change courses; students and faculty members can be co-learners; diverse representation in course attendees enriches the learning experience; and collaboration is key.
为应对气候变化对健康的影响,医疗保健领域的领导者呼吁采取行动,将气候适应和缓解措施纳入卫生专业人员的培训计划。然而,目前的教育工作者可能没有足够的气候素养和专业知识,无法有效地将此类内容纳入各自的医疗保健课程。我们作为一个国际跨专业合作团队,与专家合作开发并实施课程,以提高健康教育工作者和卫生专业研究生对气候变化的知识和能力。在一个分三步的过程中,第一阶段包括从两个机构和不同的卫生专业中招募感兴趣的教员。在第二阶段,教员们合作举办了一次关于气候变化的教员研讨会,内容包括卫生专业所需的教育能力、实践标准、指南以及特定专业的内容。研讨会的成果包括教员们更广泛的兴趣和承诺,即为医疗保健研究生创建一门跨专业的气候变化课程。在第三阶段,课程开发是由两个机构的教员与全球气候与健康教育联盟(GCCHE)的教员合作完成的,课程目标以GCCHE的能力为依据。气候专家和教员在10周的时间里为代表七个卫生专业的30名教员和学生提供了课程内容,并对他们进行了调查(n = 13)以获取反馈。这门课程可以为有兴趣为卫生专业学生开发气候变化课程的国际合作者提供一个范例。在此过程中吸取的经验教训包括:气候变化方面的新手教员可以开发出有影响力的气候变化课程;学生和教员可以成为共同学习者;课程参与者的多样化代表丰富了学习体验;合作是关键。