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      Climate change and health equity: A public health perspective on climate justice

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          Abstract

          Background

          The discourse on climate justice has developed from the theoretical approaches and discussions on environmental justice. A central tenet of the concept of environmental and climate justice is that environmental and climate issues cannot be seen in isolation from issues of social justice.

          Methods

          A conceptual model was developed on the relationship between climate change impacts, social dimensions, adaptive capacities, biological sensitivity, and health equity in order to systematically analyse climate justice. Based on an exploratory literature review and the evaluation of the individual contributions of the status report on climate change and health, the evidence in Germany on social inequalities in exposure to climate change impacts and vulnerability to their direct and indirect health effects was summarised.

          Results

          This paper provides an overview of the international debate and examples of evidence on climate justice in Germany. Climate justice in the sense of avoidable, unjust social inequalities in exposure, vulnerability, and the effects of climate mitigation and adaptation measures on health inequalities is still insufficiently addressed in Germany.

          Conclusions

          A consistent integration of equity issues into climate policy is necessary. With reference to the international literature, options for action and research needs are identified.

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          Most cited references101

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          Applying an equity lens to interventions: using PROGRESS ensures consideration of socially stratifying factors to illuminate inequities in health.

          To assess the utility of an acronym, place of residence, race/ethnicity/culture/language, occupation, gender/sex, religion, education, socioeconomic status, and social capital ("PROGRESS"), in identifying factors that stratify health opportunities and outcomes. We explored the value of PROGRESS as an equity lens to assess effects of interventions on health equity.
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            Managing the health effects of climate change: Lancet and University College London Institute for Global Health Commission.

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              Health and climate change: policy responses to protect public health

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Health Monit
                J Health Monit
                JoHM
                Journal of Health Monitoring
                Robert Koch Institute (Nordufer 20 13353 Berlin, Germany )
                2511-2708
                29 November 2023
                November 2023
                : 8
                : Suppl 6
                : 3-35
                Affiliations
                [1 ] University of Bremen, Institute of Public Health and Nursing Research , Department of Social Epidemiology, Bremen, Germany
                [2 ] Centre for Planetary Health Policy , Berlin, Germany
                [3 ] Bielefeld University, Medical School OWL, Sustainable Environmental Health Sciences , Bielefeld, Germany
                Author notes
                Corresponding author Prof Dr Gabriele Bolte, University of Bremen, Institute of Public Health and Nursing Research, Department of Social Epidemiology, Grazer Str. 4, 28359 Bremen, Germany, E-mail: gabriele.bolte@ 123456uni-bremen.de

                This is part of a series of articles that constitute the German Status Report on Climate Change and Health 2023.

                Article
                10.25646/11772
                10722520
                38105794
                8031ba7e-5436-4dec-996f-0ccfd6fb0cfc
                © Robert Koch Institute. All rights reserved unless explicitly granted.

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 27 June 2023
                : 05 October 2023
                Page count
                Figures: 3, Tables: 6, Equations: 0, References: 109, Pages: 33
                Funding
                Funded by: Federal Ministry of Health
                Award Recipient : KlimGesundAkt
                The publication was coordinated through the project KlimGesundAkt, which is funded by the Federal Ministry of Health (chapter 1504; title 54401 HJ2021; duration 07/2021 – 06/2024).
                Categories
                Focus

                environmental justice,health equity,health equity in all policies

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