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Climate change has a profound impact on the future of health and health care services. The changing climate will alter our understanding of medicine and disease, and extreme weather events can damage healthcare infrastructure, disrupt supply chains, and overwhelm medical facilities, stressing health care systems. Extreme weather events have already had significant effects on communities on the North Coast.
A study in the Lancet found health care is responsible for 7% of Australia’s total emissions. As health care providers it is also important to recognise and mitigate our role in the changing climate.
The Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care has is developing an Environmental Sustainability and Climate Resilience Healthcare Module as a framework to support organisations reduce resource waste, eliminate low-value care, and address climate risks. This module is in a pilot phase, and the Commission is looking for health services to participate.
The intent of the module is “Health service organisations integrate climate resilience and environmental sustainability into the leadership, governance, strategy, and culture of care; and strive to deliver environmentally sustainable and value-based care.”
The details of the Module pilot is available on the Commission’s website
Practices interested in participating can contact the Commission by May 20th, 2024.
Additionally, Healthy North Coast is prepared to support Primary Care practices in our region to engage in the module and working towards sustainability and increased resilience. Please contact your PHC to discuss this further.
Increased funding may be available for practices willing to engage in longer term engagement towards understanding their climate impact and working towards Net Zero.
For information please contact your Primary Health Coordinator.
We acknowledge the traditional custodians of the land we live and work, the Bundjalung, Arakwal, Yaegl, Gumbaynggirr, Githabul, Dunghutti and Birpai Nations, and their continuing connection to land, sea and community. We pay our respects to elders past, present and future.
Primary Health Coordinators