Health Care Leaders Ask Obama for Strong Climate Agreement to Protect Public Health

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Mon Nov 9, 2009 8:25am EST

Health Care Leaders Ask Obama for Strong Climate Agreement to Protect Public
Health




Climate-Related Increase in Disease, Famine, Illness Could Overwhelm Health
Sector

WASHINGTON, Nov. 9 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Health Leaders from across the
United States have sent a letter to President Obama to call his attention to
the impact of climate change on public health and the resulting challenges to
the health care sector to meet increased demands for services.  

Led by Health Care Without Harm, those signing the letter include the American
Public Health Association, the American Nurses Association, and several other
health organizations representing the interests of nearly three million health
care professionals.  Signatories also include 7 major hospital systems with
more than 160 affiliated hospitals (see attached list of signers).

The letter asks the Obama Administration to take a strong position at the
Copenhagen Climate Change talks to protect public health.  It outlines a
"Prescription for a Healthy Planet" that advocates four remedies to guide the
talks:  strengthen public health, commit to reducing greenhouse gas emissions,
transition to clean energy, and finance global solutions to climate change.
The health leaders ask for a meeting with President Obama to discuss the
implications of climate change on public health and the health care sector's
ability to deliver health services to increasingly sick populations.

"The health care sector has an obligation to speak now to bring attention to
the public health consequences of climate change," stated Gary Cohen,
President of Health Care Without Harm.  "It is imperative that we have a
strong treaty in Copenhagen to avert the worst impacts of climate change and
what could become a global public health crisis of unprecedented proportions
that could supersede our ability to provide care."  

The World Health Organization and the interagency U.S. Global Change Research
Program both predict that unmitigated climate change will likely lead to 
significant increases in illness and death related to extreme heat; the
undermining of air quality standards; the spread of vector-borne and
infectious diseases such as cholera, malaria, and dengue; the compromising of
agricultural production and food security; an increase in extreme weather
events, and floods and droughts with dramatic impacts on human health.  

"There is a clear connection between climate change and human health," said
Georges C. Benjamin, MD, FACP, FACEP (E), executive director of the American
Public Health Association. "It affects the air we breathe, the food we eat and
the spread of diseases that can make us sick. Action now will help us better
understand, minimize and prepare for the health threats associated with a
warming climate."

"Every day, nurses see the adverse affects our deteriorating climate has on
our patients and our communities, from exposure to chemicals, to increased
incidents and severity of conditions such as asthma, allergies and auto-immune
diseases, to the toll taken by floods,  droughts and natural disasters.  It is
vital that nurses, who are the single largest group of health care
professionals, take an active role in addressing the health impact of global
climate changes and environmental hazards.  This is why we are urging
President Obama to take a stand at the upcoming Copenhagen talks," added
Rebecca M. Patton, MSN, RN, CNOR, president of the American Nurses
Association. 

"The health sector around the world is waking up to the reality that climate
change is a major threat to public health, and that we must be part of the
solution," stated Joshua Karliner, International Team Coordinator for HCWH.  

Health Care Without Harm is widely engaged around the world to help mobilize
health leadership to become involved in climate change activities and to
implement programs aimed at reducing the health sector's carbon emissions.  

About Health Care Without Harm:HCWH is an international coalition of more than
430 organizations in 52 countries, working to transform the health care
industry worldwide, without compromising patient safety or care, so that it is
ecologically sustainable and no longer a source of harm to public health and
the environment. For more information on Health Care Without Harm, visit
www.noharm.org.

About the HCWH Climate Campaign:  HCWH's climate campaign mobilizes the health
care sector to advocate for strong climate mitigation and adaptation policies
at the local, national and global levels.  HCWH is committed to assisting the
health care sector to reduce its climate footprint and support efforts to
mitigate the climate footprint of the health care sector.   The campaign
provides education, resources and tools to help the health care sector improve
energy efficiency and transition away from fossil fuels toward clean,
renewable energy technologies.  Health Care Without Harm also promotes local
sustainable food systems, and advocates for sustainable water consumption,
better waste management, and climate-friendly procurement. For more
information on HCWH's climate change program, visit
www.noharm.org/all_regions/issues/energy/.

Signatories of the Letter to President Obama

Affinity Health System                  
Daniel Neufelder, CEO

American Nurses Association         
Marla Weston, Ph.D., RN, CEO

American Public Health Association  
Georges C. Benjamin, MD, FACP, FACEP (Emeritus), Executive Director

Ascension Health                       
Anthony R. Tersigni, President/CEO

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center      
Paul Levy, CEO

Bon Secours Health System, Inc.           
Richard J. Statuto, CEO/President

Catholic Healthcare West                  
Lloyd H. Dean, President and CEO

Deirdre Imus Environmental Center for Pediatric Oncology at Hackensack
University Medical Center                
Deirdre Imus, President and Founder

Health Care Improvement Foundation  
Kate J. Flynn, FACHE, President

Health Care Without Harm               
Anna Gilmore Hall, Executive Director
Gary Cohen, President

Metro Health Hospital               
Michael D. Faas, President and CEO

Physicians for Social Responsibility      
Peter Wilk, MD, Executive Director

Practice Greenhealth              
Robert Jarboe, Executive Director

Public Health Institute           
Mary A. Pittman, DrPH, President and CEO

The Center for Health Design     
Debra Levin, EDAC President and CEO



SOURCE  Health Care Without Harm

Josh Karliner, +1-415-752-1658, josh@hcwh.org, or Azibuike Akaba,
+1-202-553-9049, aakaba@hcwh.org, both of  Health Care Without Harm
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