Fossil Fuel Pollution and the Climate Crisis: Patients, Practice, and Policy feat. Secretary John Kerry
A recent Harvard Medical Grand Rounds, "Fossil Fuel Pollution and the Climate Crisis: Patients, Practice, and Policy."
Video2 Minute ReadSep | 15 | 2021
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the health care sector was at the epicenter of collective trauma. In addition to taking care of people infected by the virus, health care professionals served as messengers and provided the credible information that Americans needed to protect themselves. Health leaders also shaped policy to reduce the impact of the spreading virus on public health.
The world is in the midst of an even larger crisis: climate change. In this crisis, health care professionals are again at the center of community response and resilience. It is time to reconsider the roles and responsibilities of health care providers; it is time for a new Hippocratic Oath. We must ask—what does it mean to “do no harm” in a world threatened by climate change?
In this webinar, co-hosted by the Center for the Environment and Health at Massachusetts General Hospital and the MGH Institute of Health Professions Center for Climate Change, Climate Justice, and Health, Gary Cohen, president of Health Care Without Harm and Practice Greenhealth, explored the role of health care in climate change and racial equity.
As a major Boston academic medical center, Mass General recognizes its responsibility to prioritize sustainable practices.
A recent Harvard Medical Grand Rounds, "Fossil Fuel Pollution and the Climate Crisis: Patients, Practice, and Policy."
In a recent Grand Rounds webinar event, a panel discussed the impacts of the changing global environment on human health with a particular focus on pollution and climate change.
In a recent Grand Rounds webinar event, a panel discussed the adverse impacts of climate change on population health, shared insights into the effectiveness of prevention strategies and discussed how social resilience is important to prepare for extreme weather caused by climate change.
In a recent event hosted by the Center for the Environment and Health, a panel of experts explored the relationship between climate change, environmental degradation and risks to human health and offered strategies to address the climate crisis on an individual, community and organizational level.
The Center for the Environment and Health works with leadership at Mass General to integrate environmental sustainability into the clinical, research and educational activities of the hospital.