3 results on '"Stefanie Schütte"'
Search Results
2. Connecting planetary health, climate change, and migration
- Author
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François Gemenne, Stefanie Schütte, Antoine Flahault, Muhammad H. Zaman, and Anneliese Depoux
- Subjects
lcsh:GE1-350 ,Health (social science) ,Human migration ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Climate Change ,Human Migration ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,MEDLINE ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Climate change ,Global Health ,Planetary health ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Political science ,Global health ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Health Impact Assessment ,business ,Environmental planning ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,lcsh:Environmental sciences ,ddc:613 - Published
- 2018
3. The Lancet Countdown: tracking progress on health and climate change
- Author
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Stefanie Schütte, Anneliese Depoux, Kris A. Murray, Michael H. Depledge, Yongyuan Yin, Sari Kovats, Nick Watts, Tim Colbourn, Sonja Ayeb-Karlsson, W. Neil Adger, Peter Byass, Paula Dominguez-Salas, Anne M Johnson, Lu Liang, Bing Xu, Joy Shumake-Guillemot, Melissa C. Lott, Yong Luo, Paolo Vineis, Hilary Graham, Christine Parthemore, David Pencheon, Ian Hamilton, Jun Yang, Michael Davies, Karyn Morrissey, Yuqi Bai, Mark A. Maslin, Delia Grace, Georgina M. Mace, Peter M. Cox, Elizabeth J. Z. Robinson, Tara Neville, Anthony Costello, Nicola Wheeler, Antoine Flahault, Chaoqing Yu, Paul Drummond, Diarmid Campbell-Lendrum, Ilan Kelman, Paul Ekins, Robert Lowe, Peng Gong, Tadj Oreszczyn, Hugh Montgomery, Paul Wilkinson, Andy Haines, Maria Nilsson, and Engineering & Physical Science Research Council (EPSRC)
- Subjects
HD ,ISSUE ,010501 environmental sciences ,Global Health ,HG ,01 natural sciences ,HJ ,ENERGY ,HS ,0302 clinical medicine ,GF051 ,RA0421 ,11. Sustainability ,Global health ,Medicine ,INFECTIOUS-DISEASES ,030212 general & internal medicine ,EMISSIONS ,11 Medical and Health Sciences ,media_common ,GE ,Environmental Biomarkers ,Health Policy ,General Medicine ,Public relations ,GF ,3. Good health ,GE170 ,GN ,RA0791 ,RA0790 ,Psychological resilience ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,IMPACTS ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Climate Change ,media_common.quotation_subject ,AIR-QUALITY ,BF ,GF075 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medicine, General & Internal ,RA0565 ,BJ ,RA0960 ,General & Internal Medicine ,RA0001 ,Countdown ,Humans ,GE300 ,Health policy ,ddc:613 ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Sustainable development ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,Public health ,PERFORMANCE ,R1 ,Climate change mitigation ,13. Climate action ,QZ ,business ,Working group ,RA - Abstract
The Lancet Countdown: tracking progress on health and climate change is an international, multidisciplinary research collaboration between academic institutions and practitioners across the world. It follows on from the work of the 2015 Lancet Commission, which concluded that the response to climate change could be "the greatest global health opportunity of the 21st century". The Lancet Countdown aims to track the health impacts of climate hazards; health resilience and adaptation; health co-benefits of climate change mitigation; economics and finance; and political and broader engagement. These focus areas form the five thematic working groups of the Lancet Countdown and represent different aspects of the complex association between health and climate change. These thematic groups will provide indicators for a global overview of health and climate change; national case studies highlighting countries leading the way or going against the trend; and engagement with a range of stakeholders. The Lancet Countdown ultimately aims to report annually on a series of indicators across these five working groups. This paper outlines the potential indicators and indicator domains to be tracked by the collaboration, with suggestions on the methodologies and datasets available to achieve this end. The proposed indicator domains require further refinement, and mark the beginning of an ongoing consultation process-from November, 2016 to early 2017-to develop these domains, identify key areas not currently covered, and change indicators where necessary. This collaboration will actively seek to engage with existing monitoring processes, such as the UN Sustainable Development Goals and WHO's climate and health country profiles. The indicators will also evolve over time through ongoing collaboration with experts and a range of stakeholders, and be dependent on the emergence of new evidence and knowledge. During the course of its work, the Lancet Countdown will adopt a collaborative and iterative process, which aims to complement existing initiatives, welcome engagement with new partners, and be open to developing new research projects on health and climate change.
- Published
- 2017
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