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  1. This document constitutes the New Zealand College of Public Health Medicine (NZCPHM)’s policy statement on Climate Change. Adopted by the NZCPHM Council on 22 November 2013

    Reference:
    New Zealand College of Public Health Medicine. Policy statement on Climate Change. Wellington: New Zealand College of Public Health Medicine, 2013. Available at http://www.nzcphm.org.nz/policy

    “The New Zealand College of Public Health Medicine (NZCPHM) recognizes climate change as a serious, potentially catastrophic emerging risk to public health and health equity.

    This policy statement explains the importance of health amidst climate change impacts so that public health professionals and others can take substantive action.

    The statement describes the cause and extent of global climate change, the urgency, and the risks to human health and well-being. The statement then outlines action to prevent and manage these risks to human health and explains the potential health co-benefits from well-designed policies to address climate change.

    Finally, the statement identifies public health medicine responsibilities for climate health action.

    The New Zealand College of Public Health Medicine (NZCPHM) recognises climate change as a serious emerging risk to global public health, development and equity.

    Climate change is almost certainly already contributing to the global burden of disease and premature death, with larger health impacts expected over coming decades. These potentially catastrophic health impacts disproportionately affect developing countries, and the most disadvantaged and vulnerable within all countries.

    Aotearoa New Zealand will not be insulated from these consequences.
    In New Zealand, Māori, Pacific, vulnerable, and lower socioeconomic populations are at risk of disproportionate health impacts from climate change.

    Therefore, climate change also has serious implications for health equity in New Zealand.

    New Zealand’s location in the Pacific and its reliance on the global economy mean that beyond direct climate-health impacts, adverse impacts on the determinants of health are likely, along with new health and social pressures from migrant populations arriving in New Zealand.

    The NZCPHM has a responsibility to ensure the public health and equity consequences of climate change are understood, to lead in preventing and preparing for those consequences, and to promote the substantial population health gains that can be achieved from appropriate climate change action.

    Climate, health, and equity are inseparable. Addressing climate change should be an essential component of health policy. Similarly, health and equity outcomes must be key priorities within climate change policy.

    The College calls for public health medicine leadership and rapid action to address climate change from members at personal and professional levels – alongside health professionals, organizations, society and governments, in New Zealand and worldwide.”

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