Climate for Health Ambassadors in Action: Climate Change Grand Rounds

Last week I gave a presentation entitled “The Health Effects of Climate Damage” for Grand Rounds in the Department of Internal Medicine at Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine. I’m writing about the experience here to encourage others to do something similar.

Although I’ve given plenty of talks before and feel comfortable doing so, this one was different. Customarily, I’m invited to speak at medical and scientific venues because I’m knowledgeable about the topic. On this occasion, I contacted the organizer and offered to speak BEFORE becoming sufficiently knowledgeable. I believe the topic needs to be discussed among clinicians and I wanted to be someone who really understood the topic. When the offer was accepted, I suddenly had to learn a lot. Fortunately, resources abound.

In the past year I’ve become more actively involved in climate issues as a Climate Ambassador for Physicians for Social Responsibility. Through that organization, I was invited to attend the Climate for Health Ambassadors Training in December, jointly hosted by Climate for Health, PSR, and the Alliance of Nurses for Healthy Environments. Climate for Health has a terrific suite of resources, including advice, reports, and infographics. Additionally, if you are able to participate in an Ambassadors Training, you will also get access to a treasure of PowerPoint slides that can be sampled or used as a complete presentation. I used some of these to supplement the presentation I designed. I also found beautiful graphs and stats online from NASA and NOAA, which I incorporated into my slides with attribution. It’s reassuring that federal government agencies are still great sources for accurate climate data. A recent NY Times opinion piece also helped me to temper the bleak facts with enthusiasm and resolve and to help the audience imagine all the benefits that will result when we come together to tackle our greatest challenge. Putting the talk together was a lot of work, but it’s the kind of work I enjoy. I divided the presentation in four parts with headline titles: Our Planet is on Fire, Climate Damage is Catastrophic, Climate Damage Affects Health, and Be Part of the Solution.

When the day arrived, I felt prepared. There were about 120 people in the audience. I was glad that I left plenty of time for comments and questions because a vigorous discussion ensued. Several people asked for more details about solutions and resources I had mentioned. I was happy to oblige. Some expressed ideas and opinions, which required only agreement and encouragement. Two individuals expressed fatalistic sentiments. These can be more difficult to diffuse. My response was that their dire predictions reflect one path we can choose by inaction, but that I preferred to join forces to demand that we abandon fossil fuels and reinvest in nature for everyone’s benefit. I left charged up and ready to do it again. Please let me know if I can help you spread the message.

Dr. Michael Donnenberg is the Senior Associate Dean for Research and Research Training, Director of the MD-PhD Program and Professor of Internal Medicine and Infectious Disease at Virginia Commonwealth University. He participated in the Climate for Health Ambassadors Training in Washington, DC with Climate for HealthPSR, and ANHE. The next training will be offered at the NEHA 2020 AECRegister today to reserve your spot, or contact HealthAmbassadors@ecoamerica.org for more information. 

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