Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

Diabetes, climate change and global health – mitigating the impact

09.20.22 | Diabetologia

SAMSUNG T9 Portable SSD 2TB

SAMSUNG T9 Portable SSD 2TB transfers large imagery and model outputs quickly between field laptops, lab workstations, and secure archives.

One of the sessions at this year’s annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes in Stockholm, Sweden (19-23 September) focuses how the environmental footprint of diabetes care can be mitigated. The presentation will be given by Dr Fiona Adshead, Chair, Sustainable Healthcare Coalition, Newton Abbot, UK.

“In the last few months, the impact of climate change has become clear with floods, fires and heatwaves becoming part of our daily news,” says Dr Adshead. “The human cost is huge and yet the stark reality is that climate change is man-made. Solving this crisis require transformative change. Each country needs to undergo a green transition to achieve a net zero economy. Each sector needs to act, and healthcare must play its part.”

“First do no harm” is a core value underpinning healthcare, and yet an unintended consequence of its delivery is its own contribution to global warming. Healthcare is estimated to contribute 4.4% of global net greenhouse gas emissions so any effective national green transition must include a net zero health system.

Achieving a net zero health system is based ultimately on clinical transformation, how care is delivered that not only improves health outcomes and financial efficiency but also reduces environmental impact. In effect, a consideration of environmental impact must become part of every health care decision.

Dr Adshead discusses:

Dr Adshead says that addressing the environmental impact of diabetes care is integral to the transition towards tomorrow’s net-zero health systems and today’s tools, collaborations and partnerships can help make this happen.

She says: “Every healthcare decision needs to reduce environmental impact as well as improve health outcomes, and we know from case studies that reducing environmental impact can improve health outcomes at the same time”.

“Clinical trials are key to developing innovative new treatments. Globally we estimate they generate around 100 megatonnes CO 2 emissions per year, about the same as the whole of Belgium. Reducing their impact is key and that’s why we are developing an approach to help make this happen. One aspect we are looking at is reducing the travel footprint associated with clinical trials.”

Dr Fiona Adshead, Chair, Sustainable Healthcare Coalition. T) +44 7850 515759 E) fiona@shcoalition.org

Alternative contact: Tony Kirby in the EASD Media Centre. T) +44 7834 385827 E) tony@tonykirby.com

This work will be part of the EASD embargoed press on zoom taking place at 12.00H noon Stockholm time on Tues 20 Sept. To join the Zoom event click the link below at this time.

https://us06web.zoom.us/j/82158417914?pwd=VmtZWDFscUliQVJqTHliVmdmTUdOZz09

Dr Adshead will give her presentation during the session The heat is on! Diabetes and climate change: Wednesday, 21 September 2022, 17:30 - 18:30, Nobel Hall

The authors declare no conflicts of interest

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Judy Naylor
Diabetologia
diabetologia-j@bristol.ac.uk

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Diabetologia. (2022, September 20). Diabetes, climate change and global health – mitigating the impact. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LDEGV068/diabetes-climate-change-and-global-health-mitigating-the-impact.html
MLA:
"Diabetes, climate change and global health – mitigating the impact." Brightsurf News, Sep. 20 2022, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LDEGV068/diabetes-climate-change-and-global-health-mitigating-the-impact.html.