Critically examining research funding patterns for climate change and human health

Benjamin K. Sovacool, Heather Clifford, Rebecca Pearl-Martinez, Emma Gause, Danielle Braun, Leila Kamareddine, Amruta Nori-Sarma, Gregory A. Wellenius
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Abstract

Many actors have recently launched significant new initiatives in the domain of climate change and health. Given this important nexus, we undertook a review of funding patterns from 1985 – 2022, using the NIH RePORTER database for the United States and the Dimensions database globally. This includes an assessment of more than 9 million publicly funded projects across both databases with a collective budget of more than $3 trillion. We estimate that between 1985 and 2022 only 0.26% of research funding awarded by the NIH related to climate change, and only 0.70% of funded projects in the Dimensions database related to climate change and human health. Moreover, we thematically map funding patterns according to four thematic areas: changes in climate, the effects of climate change, health impacts, and interventions and strategies. More funding is needed to better anticipate and prepare for the projected health impacts of climate change.

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严格审查气候变化与人类健康的研究供资模式
许多行动者最近在气候变化与健康领域发起了重要的新倡议。考虑到这一重要关系,我们利用美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)的 RePORTER 数据库和全球的 Dimensions 数据库,对 1985 年至 2022 年的资助模式进行了审查。这包括对两个数据库中 900 多万个公共资助项目的评估,这些项目的总预算超过 3 万亿美元。我们估计,在1985年至2022年期间,美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)提供的研究经费中只有0.26%与气候变化有关,而在Dimensions数据库中,只有0.70%的资助项目与气候变化和人类健康有关。此外,我们还根据四个主题领域绘制了资助模式图:气候的变化、气候变化的影响、对健康的影响以及干预措施和战略。我们需要更多的资金来更好地预测气候变化对健康的预期影响,并为此做好准备。
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