通过与土著领导人、社区和卫生官员合作,加强秘鲁亚马逊地区卫生系统气候适应能力的途径。

IF 7.1 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH BMJ Global Health Pub Date : 2024-09-07 DOI:10.1136/bmjgh-2023-014391
Claudia L Vidal-Cuellar, Victoria Chicmana-Zapata, Ingrid Arotoma-Rojas, Graciela Meza, James D Ford, Hugo Rodríguez Ferruchi, Elida De-La-Cruz, Guillermo Lancha-Rucoba, Diego B Borjas-Cavero, Sonia Loarte, Ofelia Alencastre Mamani, Victoria I Peña Palma, Maria G Coronel-Altamirano, Ivonne Benites, Giovanna Pinasco, Rosa Valera, Marco Maguiña Huaman, Adolfo Urteaga-Villanueva, César V Munayco, Carol Zavaleta-Cortijo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在 COVID-19 大流行期间,土著知识和应对措施被用于保护健康,展示了土著社区如何通过参与卫生系统来提高对气候变化等突发灾害的抵御能力。本研究旨在通过以下方式为在卫生领域提高气候变化适应力提供信息:(1)研究秘鲁亚马逊地区的卫生系统是否以及如何适应气候变化;(2)了解土著社区和领导人如何在官方卫生系统中阐明对气候灾害的应对措施;(3)为提高亚马逊地区卫生系统的气候变化适应能力提供建议:本研究在胡宁(Junin)和洛雷托(Loreto)地区的两个秘鲁亚马逊医疗保健网络中进行。我们采用了混合方法设计,进行了横截面调查(13 家医疗机构)、半结构式访谈(27 名官方医疗系统参与者和 17 名土著参与者)以及两次现场研讨会,以验证和选择关键优先事项(32 名参与者)。我们采用了与世界卫生组织卫生系统构建模块相关联的气候适应性卫生系统框架:结果:秘鲁亚马逊地区的土著和官方卫生系统正在适应气候变化。原住民的应对措施包括利用有关天气变化的原住民知识、管理健康风险的植物药以及共享食物和资源的网络。官方卫生机构的应对措施包括气候变化战略和主要在气候灾害发生后采取行动的应对平台。阐明土著和官方卫生系统的关键途径包括将土著代表纳入气候和卫生治理、培训卫生工作者、改善服务提供和获取、加强证据以支持土著应对措施以及增加气候应急预算:主要的抗灾途径要求卫生系统进行更广泛的范式转变,承认土著抗灾能力对卫生适应的价值,转向更具参与性的卫生系统,并扩大卫生作为与环境内在联系的一个方面的视野。
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Pathways to strengthen the climate resilience of health systems in the Peruvian Amazon by working with Indigenous leaders, communities and health officers.

Background: Indigenous knowledge and responses were implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic to protect health, showcasing how Indigenous communities participation in health systems could be a pathway to increase resilience to emergent hazards like climate change. This study aimed to inform efforts to enhance climate change resilience in a health context by: (1) examining if and how adaptation to climate change is taking place within health systems in the Peruvian Amazon, (2) understanding how Indigenous communities and leaders' responses to climatic hazards are being articulated within the official health system and (3) to provide recommendations to increase the climate change resilience of Amazon health systems.

Methods: This study was conducted among two Peruvian Amazon healthcare networks in Junin and Loreto regions. A mixed methodology design was performed using a cross-sectional survey (13 healthcare facilities), semistructured interviews (27 official health system participants and 17 Indigenous participants) and two in-person workshops to validate and select key priorities (32 participants). We used a climate-resilient health system framework linked to the WHO health systems building blocks.

Results: Indigenous and official health systems in the Peruvian Amazon are adapting to climate change. Indigenous responses included the use of Indigenous knowledge on weather variability, vegetal medicine to manage health risks and networks to share food and resources. Official health responses included strategies for climate change and response platforms that acted mainly after the occurrence of climate hazards. Key pathways to articulate Indigenous and official health systems encompass incorporating Indigenous representations in climate and health governance, training the health work force, improving service delivery and access, strengthening the evidence to support Indigenous responses and increasing the budget for climate emergency responses.

Conclusions: Key resilience pathways call for a broader paradigm shift in health systems that recognises Indigenous resilience as valuable for health adaptation, moves towards a more participatory health system and broadens the vision of health as a dimension inherently tied to the environment.

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来源期刊
BMJ Global Health
BMJ Global Health Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
11.40
自引率
4.90%
发文量
429
审稿时长
18 weeks
期刊介绍: BMJ Global Health is an online Open Access journal from BMJ that focuses on publishing high-quality peer-reviewed content pertinent to individuals engaged in global health, including policy makers, funders, researchers, clinicians, and frontline healthcare workers. The journal encompasses all facets of global health, with a special emphasis on submissions addressing underfunded areas such as non-communicable diseases (NCDs). It welcomes research across all study phases and designs, from study protocols to phase I trials to meta-analyses, including small or specialized studies. The journal also encourages opinionated discussions on controversial topics.
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