Precision Ecologic Medicine: Tailoring Care to Mitigate Impacts of Climate Change.

Jennifer E DeVoe, Nathalie Huguet, Sonja Likumahuwa-Ackman, Andrew Bazemore, Rachel Gold, Leah Werner
Author Information
  1. Jennifer E DeVoe: Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
  2. Nathalie Huguet: Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA. ORCID
  3. Sonja Likumahuwa-Ackman: Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA. ORCID
  4. Andrew Bazemore: American Board of Family Medicine, Washington, DC, USA.
  5. Rachel Gold: OCHIN, Inc., Portland, OR, USA.
  6. Leah Werner: Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.

Abstract

As recent extreme weather events demonstrate, climate change presents unprecedented and increasing health risks, disproportionately so for disadvantaged communities in the U.S. already experiencing health disparities. As patients in these frontline communities live through extreme weather events, socioeconomic and health stressors are compounded; thus, their healthcare teams will need tools to provide precision ecologic medicine approaches to their care. Many primary care teams are taking actionable steps to bring community-level socioeconomic data ("community vital signs") into electronic medical records, to facilitate tailoring care based on a given patient's circumstances. This work can be extended to include environmental risk data, thus equipping healthcare teams with an awareness of clinical and community vital signs and making them better positioned to mitigate climate impacts on health. For example, if healthcare teams can easily identify patients who have multiple chronic conditions and live in an urban heat island, they can proactively arrange to "prescribe" an air conditioner, heat pump, and/or air purifier. Or, when a severe storm/heat event/poor air quality event is predicted, they can take preemptive steps to get help to patients at high medical and socioeconomic risk, rather than waiting for them to arrive in the emergency department. Advances in health information technologies now make it technically feasible to integrate a wealth of publicly-available community-level data into EMRs. Efforts to bring this contextual data into clinical settings must be accelerated to equip healthcare teams to provide precision ecologic medicine interventions to their patients.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. P50 CA244289/NCI NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Humans
Climate Change
Cities
Hot Temperature

Word Cloud

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