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Advancing Health Equity and Climate Change Solutions in California Through Integration of Public Health in Regional Planning.

机译:通过将公共卫生纳入区域规划来推进加利福尼亚的卫生公平和气候变化解决方案。

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摘要

Climate change is a significant public health danger, with a disproportionate impact on low-income and communities of color that threatens to increase health inequities. Many important social determinants of health are at stake in California climate change policy-making and planning, and the distribution of these will further impact health inequities. Not only are these communities the most vulnerable to future health impacts due to the cumulative impacts of unequal environmental exposures and social stressors, they are also least likely to be represented in climate change decision-making processes. Therefore, it is imperative that public health and social equity advocates participate in climate change policy-making that protects and enhances the health and well-being of vulnerable communities. Regions have emerged as important policy-making arenas for both climate change and public health in California, because many drivers of climate change are also social determinants of health (e.g. land use, housing, and transportation planning); these play out regionally and are under regional governmental authority. However, the public health sector is not engaged adequately with climate change planning given the magnitude of risks and opportunities inherent for health. Examination of where public health and equity partners have engaged in regional climate change planning and policy-making may offer lessons for how to change the drivers of health inequities and climate change through this work.;This dissertation examines why the public health sector in California is not more engaged with climate change work and regional scale planning given current threats to and opportunities for health, and whether and how public health and social equity stakeholders' participation in climate change solutions and regional scale planning can improve health and inequities outcomes and decision-making processes. The overarching goal of this research was to inform efforts to increase public health work on climate change and regional-scale planning, strengthen partnerships between public health, social equity, and climate change stakeholders, and formulate strategies that address climate change and health equity.;The first chapter of this dissertation was conducted in conjunction with a study at the Center for Climate Change and Health at the Public Health Institute, where we conducted semi-structured in-depth interviews (n=113) with public health and climate change professionals and advocates. I performed structured coding and conducted inductive-deductive thematic analysis within and across respondent groups. I found that individual-level barriers to public health engagement with climate change include perceptions that climate change is not urgent, immediate, or solvable, and insufficient understanding of public health impacts, connections, and roles. Institutional barriers include a lack of public health capacity, authority, and leadership due to risk aversion and politicization of climate change; a narrow framework for public health practice; and professional compartmentalization. Opportunities include integrating climate change into current public health practice; providing support for climate solutions with health co-benefits; and communicating, engaging and mobilizing impacted communities and public health professionals.;In the second chapter, I conducted two case studies of Sustainable Communities Strategies planning to achieve greenhouse gas reduction targets through integrated regional land use and transportation planning under California Senate Bill 375 (San Francisco Bay Area and Southern California). I used in-depth interviews (n=50) with SCS planning participants, public document review, and participant observation. I analyzed interviews using thematic analysis in an iterative inductive-deductive process. In both regions, climate change planning was a major lever for increasing the language, consideration, funding, and measurement of health impacts into the SCS plans. Public health's analytic skills and social determinants of health conceptual framework were valuable for both regional planning agencies and equity groups. Political context influenced the priority concerns, framing, and outcomes. Desire to improve public health was influential in both of these environments. In the Bay Area, a health equity frame promoted regional solutions that can improve health, equity, and climate change. In SCAG, a public health frame increased awareness, language, and future funding for active transportation. Public health was a less contested and commonly held value across diverse political jurisdictions that may be an entry point for future discussions of equity and climate change. In both regions, reform of regional governance processes was pursued to sustain institutionalization of health and equity concerns and improve regional democracy. I discuss implications and recommendations for engaging in multi-system integrated regional planning that can simultaneously improve climate change, health, and equity.;In the third chapter, I analyze the same data as a case for understanding regional-scale public health, social equity, and regional planning staff efforts to slow climate change and improve social determinants of health and social equity. In both regions multi-year SCS planning processes, public health and equity stakeholder engagement was instrumental in getting health goals, targets, and indicators into plans. In the Bay Area, advocacy efforts yielded health and equity language in policies and implementation funding guidelines and changes to the basic governance structure. In SCAG, advocacy efforts yielded significant future funding for active transportation and more metrics to monitor the health and equity impacts of planning. Participants in the SCS planning process described their motivations for engaging at the regional level, the barriers to effective regional planning, the achievements of their engagement, and recommendations for improving future efforts. In the interviews, three main themes emerged related to the opportunities and challenges of working at the regional scale: (1) Building regional identity as a foundation for advancing health and equity; (2) The importance of governance structures for health and equity, and the need for regional governance reform; (3) The prospects and barriers of building regional coalitions both within public health networks and with regional equity partners. I discuss implications and recommendations for public health's engagement with regional planning agencies, creation of coalitions, and reforming of regional governance structures to sustain better consideration of climate change, health, and equity.
机译:气候变化是重大的公共卫生危险,对低收入人群和有色人种造成不成比例的影响,有可能加剧健康不平等。健康的许多重要社会决定因素在加利福尼亚州气候变化政策制定和规划中都处于危险之中,这些因素的分布将进一步影响健康不平等。由于不平等的环境暴露和社会压力造成的累积影响,这些社区不仅最容易受到未来健康影响,而且在气候变化决策过程中代表的可能性也最小。因此,当务之急是公共卫生和社会公平倡导者参与气候变化政策制定,以保护和增进脆弱社区的健康和福祉。在加利福尼亚州,区域已成为气候变化和公共卫生的重要决策领域,因为气候变化的许多驱动因素也是健康的社会决定因素(例如土地使用,住房和交通规划);这些活动在地区范围内发挥作用,并在地区政府的领导下进行。但是,鉴于卫生固有的风险和机遇巨大,公共卫生部门没有充分参与气候变化规划。对公共卫生和公平合作伙伴在哪里进行区域气候变化规划和决策的研究可能会为如何通过这项工作改变健康不平等和气候变化的驱动因素提供经验教训。考虑到当前对健康的威胁和机遇,以及公共卫生和社会公平利益相关者参与气候变化解决方案和区域规模规划是否以及如何改善健康和不公平结果及决策,因此不再更多地参与气候变化工作和区域规模规划流程。这项研究的总体目标是为加强气候变化和区域规模规划方面的公共卫生工作,加强公共卫生,社会公平和气候变化利益相关者之间的伙伴关系,制定应对气候变化和健康公平的战略提供信息。本论文的第一章是与公共卫生研究所气候变化与健康中心的一项研究一起进行的,在该中心,我们与公共卫生和气候变化专业人士进行了半结构化的深度访谈(n = 113),拥护者。我进行了结构化编码,并在受访者群体内和受访者群体之间进行了归纳演绎主题分析。我发现,在个人层面上阻碍公共卫生参与气候变化的障碍包括人们对气候变化不是紧迫,即时或可解决的认识,以及对公共卫生影响,联系和作用的了解不足。制度上的障碍包括由于风险规避和气候变化政治化而缺乏公共卫生能力,权威和领导能力;公共卫生实践的狭窄框架;和专业分隔。机会包括将气候变化纳入当前的公共卫生实践;提供具有健康共同利益的气候解决方案支持;在第二章中,我进行了两个可持续社区战略计划的案例研究,这些计划旨在通过加利福尼亚州参议院第375号法案(San旧金山湾区和南加州)。我对SCS规划参与者,公共文档审阅和参与者观察进行了深入访谈(n = 50)。我在迭代归纳演绎过程中使用主题分析来分析访谈。在这两个地区,气候变化规划都是将语言,考虑因素,资金以及对健康影响的评估纳入SCS计划的主要杠杆。公共卫生的分析技能和健康概念框架的社会决定因素对于区域计划机构和平等团体都非常有价值。政治背景影响了优先事项,框架和结果。在这两种环境中,改善公共卫生的愿望都具有影响力。在海湾地区,健康公平框架促进了可以改善健康,公平和气候变化的区域解决方案。在SCAG中,公共卫生框架提高了人们对主动交通的认识,语言和未来的资金投入。在不同的政治管辖区中,公共卫生的争议较少,且普遍持有,这可能是将来讨论公平与气候变化的切入点。在两个地区,对区域治理程序进行了改革,以维持健康和公平问题的制度化并改善区域民主。我讨论了参与可同时改善气候变化,健康和公平的多系统集成区域规划的意义和建议。在第三章中,我分析了相同的数据,以了解区域规模的公共卫生,社会公平以及区域规划人员在减缓气候变化,改善健康和社会公平的社会决定因素方面的努力。在这两个地区的多年SCS规划过程中,公共卫生和利益相关方的参与都有助于将健康目标,指标和指标纳入计划。在湾区,宣传工作在政策和实施资金指南以及基本治理结构的变化方面产生了健康和平等的用语。在SCAG中,宣传工作为未来的主动交通筹集了大量资金,并提供了更多指标来监控规划对健康和公平的影响。 SCS规划过程的参与者描述了他们在区域一级参与的动机,有效的区域规划的障碍,参与的成就以及改进未来工作的建议。在访谈中,出现了与在区域范围内开展工作的机遇和挑战有关的三个主要主题:(1)建立区域形象,作为促进健康和公平的基础; (2)治理结构对卫生和公平的重要性,以及区域治理改革的必要性; (3)在公共卫生网络内以及与区域公平伙伴建立区域联盟的前景和障碍。我讨论了公共卫生与区域规划机构合作,建立联盟以及改革区域治理结构以更好地考虑气候变化,健康和公平的意义和建议。

著录项

  • 作者

    Gould, Solange M.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Berkeley.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Berkeley.;
  • 学科 Public health.;Climate change.;Urban planning.
  • 学位 Dr.P.H.
  • 年度 2015
  • 页码 131 p.
  • 总页数 131
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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