Sorensen Cecilia, Magalhães Danielly, Hamacher Nicola, Sullivan James K, Weinstein Hannah N W, Pinho-Gomes Ana-Catarina, Biberman Dorothy, Donaldson Holly, Gómez-Duarte Ingrid, Middleton John, Magaña Laura, Urbina Manuel, Kaseje Margaret, Cascante-Flores Nora, Surenthirakumaran Rajendra, Ivers Rebecca, Sáenz Rocío, Chen Tara Tai-Wen, Lopez Wendy, Romanello Marina, Zhang Ying
Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Columbia University, New York City, NY, USA; Global Consortium on Climate and Health Education, Columbia University, New York City, NY, USA.
Global Consortium on Climate and Health Education, Columbia University, New York City, NY, USA.
Lancet Planet Health. 2024 Dec;8(12):e1010-e1019. doi: 10.1016/S2542-5196(24)00284-5.
Public health professionals are crucial in implementing health-promoting climate change adaptation and mitigation measures, yet climate education is inconsistently integrated into public health curricula worldwide. We aimed to assess the proportion of institutions that provided public health degrees with climate and health education, the annual number of students trained in climate and health, and the extent to which students had climate and health knowledge during 2023-24.
From Nov 1, 2023, to March 15, 2024, our online survey quantified climate and health education in public health schools that provide degrees across all WHO regions. The survey was available in English, Spanish, and Portuguese and distributed to Global Consortium on Climate and Health Education member institutions and organisations and the Global Network for Academic Public Health; institutions in 138 countries were invited to participate. We collected data on optional and mandatory training, enrolment in versus actual education on climate topics, degree programmes offering climate education, year of curriculum implementation, and the extent of training across eight competency domains. Instructions stated that the survey should be completed by school staff who designed, taught, or were familiar with climate or planetary health content and curricula within their institution. Two follow-up reminder emails were sent to institutions that had not completed the survey on Jan 13, 2024, and Feb 15, 2024. We also measured the presence of climate education among randomly selected non-responding institutions through internet searches for evidence of a class or a concentration from June 1 to July 25, 2024.
The survey was sent to 1251 public health institutions across 138 countries; we received responses from 279 (22%) of 1251 institutions in 81 (59%) of 138 countries. Most institutions that we invited were in the WHO region of the Americas (n=776), the African region (n=177), and the European region (n=155). 196 (70%) of 279 responding institutions and 62 (77%) of 81 responding countries reported providing climate and health education during 2023-24. The number of responding institutions providing climate and health education was 53 (80%) of 66 in the European region, 21 (72%) of 29 in the Western Pacific region, five (71%) of seven in the South-East Asia region, 97 (68%) of 143 in the region of the Americas, 15 (63%) of 24 in the African region, and five (50%) of ten in the Eastern Mediterranean region. 298 degree-level public health programmes were identified during 2023-24, of which 171 (57%) reported that climate and health education was part of the required curriculum. Master's degree programmes provided the most climate and health education (118 [40%] of 298 degree-level programmes identified). A search of 135 additional non-responding institutions indicated that 36 (27%) likely offered climate and health education.
Our global survey of institutions that provide public health degrees found widespread integration of climate topics in public health curricula. To address disparities, future work should prioritise integrating climate and health education globally, increasing investments, and securing institutional and political support. International cooperation and national engagement are essential to achieve comprehensive climate education across all public health training programmes.
None.
公共卫生专业人员在实施促进健康的气候变化适应和缓解措施方面至关重要,但气候教育在全球公共卫生课程中的整合并不一致。我们旨在评估提供公共卫生学位并开展气候与健康教育的机构比例、2023 - 2024年期间接受气候与健康培训的学生年度数量,以及学生在该期间具备气候与健康知识的程度。
2023年11月1日至2024年3月15日,我们通过在线调查对在世界卫生组织所有区域提供学位的公共卫生学校中的气候与健康教育进行量化。该调查提供英文、西班牙文和葡萄牙文版本,并分发给气候与健康教育全球联盟的成员机构和组织以及全球学术公共卫生网络;邀请了138个国家的机构参与。我们收集了关于选修和必修培训、气候主题的注册情况与实际教育情况、提供气候教育的学位课程、课程实施年份以及八个能力领域的培训程度的数据。说明指出,调查应由设计、讲授或熟悉其所在机构内气候或地球健康内容及课程的学校工作人员完成。我们向未在2024年1月13日和2024年2月15日完成调查的机构发送了两封跟进提醒邮件。我们还通过在2024年6月1日至7月25日期间对随机选择的未回复机构进行互联网搜索,以查找班级或专业方向的证据,来衡量气候教育的存在情况。
该调查发送给了138个国家的1251所公共卫生机构;我们收到了来自138个国家中81个国家(59%)的1251所机构中的279所(22%)的回复。我们邀请的大多数机构位于世界卫生组织美洲区域(n = 776)、非洲区域(n = 177)和欧洲区域(n = 155)。279个回复机构中的196个(70%)以及81个回复国家中的62个(77%)报告在2023 - 2024年期间提供了气候与健康教育。提供气候与健康教育的回复机构数量在欧洲区域为66个中的53个(80%),西太平洋区域为29个中的21个(72%),东南亚区域为七个中的五个(71%),美洲区域为143个中的97个(68%),非洲区域为24个中的15个(63%),东地中海区域为十个中的五个(50%)。在2023 - 2024年期间确定了298个学位水平的公共卫生项目,其中171个(57%)报告气候与健康教育是必修课程的一部分。硕士学位项目提供的气候与健康教育最多(在确定的298个学位水平项目中有118个[40%])。对另外135个未回复机构的搜索表明,36个(27%)可能提供气候与健康教育。
我们对提供公共卫生学位的机构进行的全球调查发现,气候主题在公共卫生课程中得到了广泛整合。为解决差异问题,未来的工作应优先在全球范围内整合气候与健康教育、增加投资,并获得机构和政治支持。国际合作和国家参与对于在所有公共卫生培训项目中实现全面的气候教育至关重要。
无。