Core Climate & Health Competencies for Health Professionals
We subscribe to this set of core competencies developed by the Advisory Council and Coordinating Committee for the Global Consortium on Climate and Health Education (GCCHE), part of the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University.
Overarching Goals: This list identifies climate and health core competencies for health professional students. These core competencies reflect foundational climate and health understanding and skills across five areas of practice, which are recommended for all health professionals.
Area of Practice #1
Climate and health knowledge and analytical skills; Goal: Demonstrate an understanding of the complex relationships between climate change and health.
Unit of Competency |
Elements of Competence |
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Applies knowledge of climate drivers, weather, climate change, and climate variability. |
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Applies knowledge of climate drivers, weather, climate change, and climate variability. |
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Applies knowledge of the health impacts of climate change relevant to adapting health services. |
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Applies knowledge of climate mitigation and adaptation, and health co-benefits of actions. |
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Applies knowledge of health security, vulnerability, and resilience. |
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Knows how to access and interpret the relevance of local, national, and international information about climate change effects on health to specific regions. |
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Applies knowledge of the ethical, professional, and legal obligations relevant to climate and health. |
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Area of Practice #2
Climate change and public health practice; Goal: Demonstrate competence in recognizing population-based hazards and designing and implementing public health interventions.
Unit of Competency |
Elements of Competence |
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Applies climate and health knowledge to improve decisions about public health services, and adapt and improve population health. |
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Applies knowledge of emergency planning skills. |
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Area of Practice #3
Climate change and clinical practice; Goal: Demonstrate competence in diagnosis and management of climate-sensitive and climate-induced illness and management of health care facilities.
Unit of Competency |
Elements of Competence |
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Shows how health care professionals and facilities can respond to health risks of climate change. |
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Applies knowledge of emergency planning skills. |
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Applies knowledge to clinical care of patients. |
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Area of Practice #4
Policy aspects of climate change and health; Goal: Demonstrate familiarity with international and domestic policies relevant to climate change and health.
Unit of Competency |
Elements of Competence |
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Understanding of the role of international, national, and subnational policy frameworks in addressing health risks of climate change. |
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Understanding of the climate-health activism and policy engagement roles of health professionals, as well as the limitations. |
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Area of Practice #5
Communication; Goal: Demonstrate competence on how to communicate health and climate information to different audiences.
Unit of Competency |
Elements of Competence |
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Shows how to communicate, share, and work collaboratively on climate and health issues. |
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Address scientific and climate uncertainties. |
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Sources
- Bell, E.J. (2010), Climate change: what competencies and which medical education and training approaches?, BMC Medical Education, 10(1), p.31.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2016), “Climate Effects on Health”, available at: https://www.cdc.gov/climateandhealth/effects/default.htm (accessed 6 February 2018).
- Cibrelus, L. and Constanza, M.C.G. (2010), Climate information for public health: a curriculum for best practices: putting principles to work, Columbia University Academic Commons.
- Climate Literacy & Energy Awareness Network (2018), “Climate and Energy Educational Resources”, available at: https://cleanet.org/clean/educational_resources/index.html (accessed 28 December 2017).
- Grant, G. (1979), On competence: a critical analysis of competence-based reforms in higher education, Jossey-Bass Inc., San Francisco, CA.
- Haine, D. (2017), personal communication, 8 September.
- U.S. Global Change Research Program (2009), Climate literacy: the essential principles of climate science, Washington, DC.
- Walpole, S.C., Vyas, A., Maxwell, J., Canny, B.J., Woollard, R., Wellbery, C., Leedham-Green, K.E., Musaeus, P., Tufail-Hanif, U., Pavão Patrício, K. and Rother, H.A. (2017), Building an environmentally accountable medical curriculum through international collaboration, Medical Teacher, 39(10), pp.1040-1050.
- Wellbery, C. (2017), "Selective course description", elective course outline.