Professor Vincent Idemyor, a distinguished scholar from the University of Port Harcourt, has been invited to moderate and speak at the prestigious American Society of Health-System Pharmacists Clinical Meeting in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. On December 10, 2024, Idemyor will deliver a plenary session, “Preparing Healthcare Service Delivery for Climate Change Impacts,” to an audience of over 20,000 pharmacy professionals from around the world.
Idemyor’s presentation will explore the critical connection between climate change and healthcare, focusing on disease states and medical conditions exacerbated by climate change. He will highlight the profound effects of climate change on mental health, including increased stress, depression, anxiety, grief, substance use, and personality disorders.
Climate change’s impact on healthcare is multifaceted:
- Heat-related illnesses and deaths
- Vector-borne diseases (e.g., malaria, dengue fever)
- Water-borne diseases (e.g., cholera, typhoid)
- Respiratory problems (e.g., asthma, COPD)
- Mental health issues (e.g., PTSD, anxiety)
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One of the central themes of Idemyor’s presentation will be the interaction between medications and the body during prolonged heat exposure. He will emphasize the need for healthcare providers and patients to understand how certain medications may respond differently under extreme heat conditions, leading to adverse health outcomes.
For instance:
- Certain medications can exacerbate heat-related illnesses
- Heat can affect medication efficacy and potency
- Patients with pre-existing conditions may require adjusted medication regimens.
Idemyor will underscore the pivotal role healthcare professionals must play in addressing climate-related health risks. He will advocate for urgent policy changes within healthcare systems to ensure they are better prepared to manage climate-related health challenges.
“In a sense, the pressure is on us as practitioners and researchers whose fields are grounded in science. We are the ones policymakers will turn to as government budgets are allocated. Science will prevail because it is rooted in undeniable realities.”
Idemyor will propose integrating climate science into medical curricula and continuing education programs to equip practitioners for the evolving health challenges associated with climate change. He will also call on healthcare professionals to take an active role as climate change educators and advocates.
Idemyor will discuss strategies for effectively communicating the links between climate and health to policymakers and the public. He will argue that healthcare providers have an ethical responsibility to engage in climate action, viewing environmental stewardship as an extension of the Hippocratic Oath.
Idemyor’s proposed solution includes creating climate-health task forces within healthcare institutions to drive sustainable practices and shape health-related climate policies.
As Idemyor and global health experts have warned, climate change is the greatest threat to public health. Over 200 medical journals recently issued a joint statement calling on world leaders to cut heat-trapping emissions, stressing that failure to act will lead to irreversible harm to human health.