Avsnitt
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In this episode we speak to Dr. Carissa Klarich, Dr. Jennifer Robohm, and Dr. Robin Cooper, co-authors of a case emphasizing the connection between climate change, anxiety, and panic disorder. Check out their written case (adaptable for medical school curricula) at Climate Resources for Health Education: https://climatehealthed.org/course/anxiety/. In addition to podcast participants, case development was led by Caellaugh Catley.
Resources mentioned:
Landmark Montana climate casehttps://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/14/us/montana-youth-climate-ruling.html Caellaugh Catley’s climate effortshttps://sustainability.wustl.edu/student-represents-school-of-medicine-at-cleanmed-conference/Episode written by Phoebe Cunningham and Elizabeth Whidden, Produced by Natasha Sood, and Edited by Liana Haigis.
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Learn about climate change career paths & advocacy efforts within the field of med ed during this conversation with Dr. Farah Hussain, first-ever Director of Planetary Health Curriculum at the Perelman School of Medicine.
Relevant links mentioned in episode:- IPCC report https://www.ipcc.ch/sr15/2:49
- Lancet countdown on climate & health homepage https://www.thelancet.com/countdown-health-climate
- Ayana Elizabeth Johnson's venn diagram on climate action https://www.ayanaelizabeth.com/climatevenn
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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We’re releasing this episode from the archives (recorded in 2021) – an interview between Dr. Lisa Patel and our podcast editor & Brown University student, Liana Haigis.
Dr. Patel is the Executive Director of the Medical Society Consortium on Climate and Health and a Clinical Associate Professor in Pediatrics for Stanford Children's Health. This episode’s conversation covers a lot of ground, including the unique vulnerabilities of pediatric patients to climate change, wildfires & hospital power outages, and community resilience. Dr. Patel discusses key learnings about environmental justice and physician advocacy, her focus areas.
Below are two articles that she highlights in this episode:
- Confronting Carbon Inequality https://www.oxfam.org/en/research/confronting-carbon-inequality
- Reparations as a Public Health Priority – A Strategy for Ending Black-White Health Disparities https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2026170 -
Dr. Terry O’Connor, Dr. Nuzhat Islam, and MD-PhD candidate Douglas Fritz walk with us through their clinical case highlighting the impact of climate change on arboviral infectious disease. Check out their written case (adaptable for medical school curricula) at Climate Resources for Health Education here: https://climatehealthed.org/course/arboviruses/
Dr. O’Connor is an instructor of Emergency Medicine at the University of Washington and Director of the Diploma in Climate Medicine at the University of Colorado Climate and Health Program. Dr. Islam is a second year internal medicine resident at the University of California in San Diego and a co-founder of the Planetary Health Report Card. Douglas is a second year MD/PhD student at the University of Colorado and one of the vice chairs for Medical Students for a Sustainable Future.
Hosted by Genny Silva
Edited by Liana Haigis
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In this episode, we speak with medical student James Sullivan from the Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine at Case Western Reserve University about the process of creating an integrated climate-health curriculum at the medical school.
If you want to learn more, check out this journal article about the Cleveland Clinic’s climate-health curricular design: Climate Change and Medical Education: An Integrative Model (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34432714/)
Episode written by Genny Silva, Produced by Natasha Sood, and Edited by Liana Haigis
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In this episode, we talk with Dr. Heather Whelan, Kelsey Barter, and Hossein Moein Taghavi about the connections between heat, air pollution, and neurodegenerative disease. Dr. Whelan is a Professor of Medicine at University of California San Francisco, Kelsey is a medical student at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, and Hossein is a research assistant at Stanford University School of Medicine. Dr. Whelan, Kelsey, and Hossein wrote this case as part of the Climate Resources for Health Education (CRHE) initiative (Case OSS9.2). Join us as we dive into this patient case!
To learn more about CRHE head over to climatehealthed.org.
Episode written by Genny Silva, Produced by Natasha Sood, and Edited by Liana Haigis -
In this episode, we talk with Dr. Gaurab Basu about how climate change, at its core, is a health inequity multiplier and a human rights issue. Dr. Basu is a physician and the founding co-director of the Cambridge Health Alliance Center for Health Equity Education and Advocacy in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He is also an instructor in the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School. Join us as we discuss all of this and more! To learn about Dr. Basu’s initiatives, head over to: Gaurab Basu | Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
Hosted by Natasha Sood
Written by Natasha Sood & Sarah Hsu
Edited by Liana Haigis
Referenced Resources:
C-CHANGE | Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
Climate Change Effects On Public Health | Yale School Of Public Health
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From February 13-17th, 2021, Winter Storm Uri devastated much of North America with catastrophic wind, ice and snow. Notably impacted was the state of Texas, which experienced widespread power outages, infrastructure damage and essential resource shortages. Guest hosts Cole Martin and Sarah McWilliam, two students from University of Texas at Austin’s Dell Medical School, examine the effects of the storm on community health and medical practice in today’s episode. They’re joined by Dr. Sarah Scott and fellow medical student Girija Hariprasad to share the experiences of medical professionals during this extreme weather event and what we can do to improve our response to similar climate-related events in the future.
Hosted by Cole Martin & Sarah McWilliam
Written by Cole Martin & Sarah McWilliam
Edited by Liana Haigis
Episode Transcript
Referenced Resources:
The Disconnect: Power, Politics and the Texas Blackout
Planetary Health Report Card
Racial Justice Report Card
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Our special Earth Week episode is produced in collaboration with ecoAmerica and Climate for Health! Listen as Rebecca Rehr leads a conversation with Dr. Cheryl Holder and Dr. Boris Lushniak, where they discuss opportunities to support health professional leadership and center health equity in climate solutions. They’ll also check the rear view mirror for any lessons learned in 2020 and places to build synergies and collaboration.
Hosted by Mattie Boehler-Tatman
Edited by Liana Haigis
Episode Transcript
Full Interview and Referenced Resources
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How can we best discuss climate change and mental health with our patients, and what steps can we take to deal with our own climate anxiety? Join us as we discuss all of this and more with our special guest Dr. Elizabeth Haase, a founding member of the Climate Psychiatry Alliance and Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Nevada in Reno. Producer and host Julia Rothschild also details the latest literature on the intersection of climate change and psychiatry. Special thanks to Dr. Haase and the entire Climate Psychiatry Alliance for helping create this episode. To learn more about the Climate Psychiatry Alliance and ways to get involved, head over to their website at https://www.climatepsychiatry.org/.
Hosted by Julia Rothschild
Written by Julia Rothschild
Edited by Liana Haigis
Episode Transcript
Referenced Resources:
Climate Change and Mental Health Connections
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Let’s talk climate change and Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs)! In this episode, we’re joined by Dr. Mindy Richlen, Assistant Director of the U.S. National Office for Harmful Algal Blooms and member of the Greater Caribbean Center for Ciguatera Research, to discuss:
How climate change is contributing to the global expansion of HABs.
How HABs can cause a debilitating and underdiagnosed illness known as Ciguatera Fish Poisoning.
What this all means for healthcare providers!Given the changing geographic patterns of ciguatera due to climate change, we want to make sure all healthcare professionals are well-equipped to diagnose and manage patients with suspected Ciguatera Fish Poisoning. Make sure to catch our Ciguatera case study at the end of the episode!
Hosted by Sarah Hsu
Written by Kelly Williamson
Edited by Liana Haigis
Episode Transcript
Referenced Resources:
U.S. National Office for Harmful Algal Blooms
Greater Caribbean Center for Ciguatera Research (GCCCR)
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Let’s talk climate change and reproductive health. Join us as we discuss the latest literature on climate change's impacts on pregnancy with our co-producer Julia Rothschild. Then, we’ll dive into clinical pearls with Dr. Adelle Monteblanco, Asst. Professor of Sociology at Middle Tennessee State University, and talk about her recent project training maternal health workers to effectively advise their pregnant patients about heat. We close out this episode with what healthcare professionals can do to protect pregnant patients from climate change, at both the patient and policy levels.
For rack cards, brochures, and urine charts to use in your clinic (in English & Spanish), check out Dr. Adelle Monteblanco’s website! Have questions for Dr. Monteblanco? Email her at [email protected] and follow her on Twitter @adelle_dora.
*Note, the ACOG recognizes that climate change disproportionately affects women. However, as our episode focuses on pregnancy, we use the terms “pregnant patient/people/individuals” in acknowledgement that not all pregnant individuals identify as women.
Hosted by Sarah Hsu
Written by Julia Rothschild
Edited by Liana Haigis
Episode Transcript
Referenced Resources:
Maternal ambient air pollution, preterm birth and markers of fetal growth in Rhode Island: results of a hospital-based linkage study
Association of Air Pollution and Heat Exposure With Preterm Birth, Low Birth Weight, and Stillbirth in the US: A Systematic Review
US: Heat Emergency Plans Missing Pregnancy, Racial Justice
Effects of prenatal exposure to ambient air pollutant PM10 on ultrasound-measured fetal growth
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Need a climate and health 101? In our debut episode, we speak with Dr. Jeffrey Shaman, Director of the Climate and Health program at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health, to provide a crash course introduction on the relationship between climate change and health.
Starting from the basics, Dr. Shaman helps contextualize global warming using concepts from earth science, economics, and sociology. We then examine how our changing climate has already impacted human health and will continue to affect us for generations to come. Most importantly, we talk about what we can and need to do to make a difference.
This episode sets the stage for our series, where we’ll dig deeper into the specific health consequences of climate change, the solutions we can employ, and much more.
Hosted by Natasha Sood
Edited by Liana Haigis
Episode Transcript
Referenced Resources:
IPCC’s 2018 Special Report
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How does climate change affect health? And what can medical professionals do about it?
Those are the very questions we hope to answer here on Code Green: The Climate-Smart Health Professional. In each episode of this series, we’ll explore the intersection of climate change and health, summarize the latest research, and share the expertise of current climate-health activists.
Climate change is the greatest health crisis of this century, it’s time health professionals are trained to fight this crisis!
Hosted by Natasha Sood and Sarah Hsu, edited by Liana Haigis and Andrea Grossman, social media managed by Naomi Nesmith.
Instagram: @CodeGreenClimatePod
Twitter: @CodeGreenPod