ذكذكتسٍ¤

Going Farther Together

Climate & Health Impact Report, 2024-2025 

Areas of Impact

Uniting the Health Sector to Act on Climate​

The health sector accounts for approximately 8.5% of US carbon emissions, making it both a contributor to climate change and uniquely positioned to lead in protecting the nation’s health from climate impacts. The Climate Collaborative, launched in 2021, was established to align health sector leaders around collective goals and actions to reduce emissions and advance sustainability, based on evidence, shared solutions, and a commitment to improve health.

This program brings together health and hospital systems, clinicians, private payers, suppliers, industry, academia, and nonprofits, with the private and public sectors, to tackle a challenge no single institution can solve alone. It is structured around four priority areas and serves as a neutral platform for collaboration and coordination, and translates climate ambition into measurable progress across the health sector.

Local Leadership, National Reach

The Climate Communities Network (CCN) exists to backج‎localج‎leadersج‎working at the intersection of climate and health,ج‎connectingج‎them, andج‎helpingج‎them get theج‎supportج‎they need. CCN is ذكذكتسٍ¤â€™s community-led network within the Climate Grand Challenge, builtج‎in recognition ofج‎lived experienceج‎asج‎expertiseج‎andج‎with the aim ofج‎linkingج‎localج‎solutionsج‎to national partnerships that can enable and extend those impacts.ج‎

CCN is proving a simple point: when community leadership is resourced and connected, progress becomesج‎practical, quantifiable,ج‎andج‎built to last.ج‎

Health is the Message that Travels

For too many years the framing of the climate crisis has lacked sufficient messaging that it is primarily a human health issue, rather than solely an environmental or energy problem. The Grand Challenge aims to elevate the messaging around the health consequences of climate change, the opportunities available as sectors transitions, highlight solutions that deliver immediate health and financial benefits, and convene to catalyze action across sectors.

This workstream pairs credible communication, trusted resources, and high visibility convenings, putting this work at the center of national moments where climate and health leaders align, build partnerships, and accelerate progress.

From Evidence Gaps to Action-Ready Research

Research on climate and health is urgently needed to shed light on the mechanisms behind health impacts, demonstrate efficacy of adaptation and mitigation strategies, and improve predictive capabilities.

Closing these gaps will be essential to identifying climate impacts on specific populations, predicting the impacts of climate on health, and developing targeted solutions.

Regional hubs, locally led

R&I Global Research Hubs

In 2024, ذكذكتسٍ¤ launched its first regional research and innovation hub in Kathmandu, Nepal, convening cross-sector leaders to align on priority research needs and actionable opportunities at the intersection of climate change, health, and lived community realities across South and Southeast Asia. In 2025, ذكذكتسٍ¤ expanded the model to the Caribbean, bringing regional and global partners together in Barbados to identify gaps and accelerate locally relevant research, training, and collaboration.

From Ambition to Transformative Action

Theج‎Transforming Systemsج‎initiativeج‎representsج‎the long-termج‎systems agendaج‎ofج‎theج‎ذكذكتسٍ¤â€™s Climate Grand Challenge,ج‎moving beyond incremental, siloed solutions toج‎reimagineج‎how economic, governance, and social systems can be redesigned to deliver health, equity, and resilience in a changing climate.ج‎Thoughج‎early in its lifecycle, it has alreadyج‎establishedج‎a credible global vision and positionedج‎theج‎ذكذكتسٍ¤ج‎as a convening hubج‎for cross-sector,ج‎health-centered climateج‎leadership.ج‎

Building the Roadmap for Climate Action

In 2026, the ذكذكتسٍ¤ and broader National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM),ج‎launched a consensus study to develop aج‎Roadmap for Transformative Action to Achieve Health for All at Net-Zero Emissions.ج‎

What it is

The consensus study isج‎the National Academies’ gold standard for producingج‎independent, evidence-based, policy-relevant guidanceج‎on complex challenges, and the only mechanism through which the Academies make formal recommendations.ج‎ج‎

Over a 12-month period, the study is producing a principles-based, context-responsive framework that is globally relevant and locally adaptable, helping decision-makers align mitigation and adaptation strategies with improved health, equity, well-being, and inclusive economic resilience—grounded in systems thinking, the best available evidence, and real-world, case-based insights.

What the roadmap will provide

  • A decision framework to support priority-settingج‎for policy and investment decisionsج‎across sectors, scales, and geographiesج‎
  • Implementation-orientedج‎and cross-cuttingج‎guidanceج‎on high-impact leverage pointsج‎and howج‎toج‎navigateج‎trade-offsج‎transparently and proactivelyج‎
  • Practical recommendations, supported by case-basedج‎exemplars,ج‎thatج‎demonstrateج‎the conditions and differentiated pathways to translate systems change ambition into transformative a³¦³ظ¾±´ا²شج‎ج‎
  • A foundation to mobilize partnerships,ج‎financing, and a³¦³ظ¾±´ا²شج‎aligned with health,ج‎well-being,ج‎resilience, and equity outcomesج‎

Future Impact

Following publication in early 2027, the ذكذكتسٍ¤ will lead implementation, workingج‎with a global network of partners toج‎put the Roadmap to use in real world decisionج‎environments, enabling locally owned and drive actions that, together,ج‎compound intoج‎transformative systems changeج‎needed toج‎improve health and well-being, reduce inequities, and build lasting resilience for generations to come. ج‎

Worldwide Collaboration that Strengthens Action at Home

Climate and health challenges do notج‎acknowledgeج‎borders, and neither can the solutions. ذكذكتسٍ¤â€™s global initiatives extend the Climate Grand Challenge, not to replace national leadership, but to strengthen it. By partnering with peer academies and investing in future leaders, ذكذكتسٍ¤ is translating global collaboration into practicalج‎actions, durable relationships, and shared capacity that can accelerate progress across the climate and health field.ج‎

What Global Collaboration Made Possibleج‎

The value of this work is leverage. ذكذكتسٍ¤â€™s global partnerships create shared direction, test new models of leadership, and produce tools that funders and institutions can useج‎immediately.ج‎

Sustainable health research, led by future leadersج‎
ذكذكتسٍ¤ and UKAMS operated as equal partners and placed emerging leaders at the center of agenda-setting and authorship. The result wasج‎For People, For Planet: Improving the Environmental Sustainability of Healthج‎Research, a policy report designed to move sustainability from aspiration to practice across the research ecosystem. Its recommendations span the full set of levers that shape research culture and operations, including funding incentives, regulation, procurement, infrastructure, data and metrics, and capacity building.ج‎

Global Coalition of Academies of Medicine on Climate and Healthج‎
Launched in late 2025, the Coalition brings together national academies and medical divisions to strengthen the scientific foundation for climate and health action and support practical, context-specific implementation. The Coalition issued a joint statement in support of Brazil’s Belأ©m Health Action Plan at COP30 and is aligned around priority areas that help translate evidence into action, including surveillance and monitoring, evidence synthesis and capacity building, and innovation and sustainable production.ج‎

The Climate and Health Future We Build Together

The next several years must be defined by continued alignment, action, and accountability.

Our vision is for climate and health is to stand as a permanent pillar of public health driven by durable institutions who sustain pipelines of talent, funding, innovation, knowledge and action.

The CGC will ultimately be measured not only by the number of convenings and reports, but by the strength of the institutions and collaborations built, the durability of the pipelines created, the achievements made through our collective action, and the extent to which communities experience real improvements in health and resilience.

The health harms of climate change are well documented and are already affecting human health. Our responsibility is to stand firmly for science and advancing the health for everyone, everywhere.

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