Priority Issue 1 Building Resilent Health System
Equitable access to health services for all. Ensuring the access through promotion of science, technology, and innovation in the health sector for all, provision of treatment and prevention;
Further improvement of health systems and infrastructures at global, regional and national levels. The improvement to create a safety net for imminent existential threats such as pandemics and calamities from climate change;
Transformation of health system. That should be a part of enhancing global preparedness and response that benefits every layer of society.
EXPECTED OUTCOME
Ensuring equitable access to health services for all through the promotion of science, technology, and innovation in the health sector for all, provision of
treatment and prevention, including the enhancement of community’s understanding for proper behavior in preventing pandemic outbreaks, improvement of interconnected health systems, development of digital
health and its infrastructure, telemedicine, geospatial sensor, as well as expansion of public healthcare, including value-based health care (VBHC) and Universal Health Coverage (UHC) to reach the SDGs target.
Further improvement of health systems and infrastructures at global, regional and national levels. The improvement to create a safety net for imminent existential threats such as pandemics and calamities from climate change;
Transformation of health system. That should be a part of enhancing global preparedness and response that benefits every layer of society.
Priority Issue 2 Advancing a Sustainable Low Carbon Health System
Demonstrating leadership on carbon emission reduction and air pollution in contributing to national climate targets, and directly address the intersection between climate and health system.
Level of commitment of health system of countries to develop action plan for a low carbon sustainable health sector, that aligns with the Paris Agreement and also contributes to greater resilience: reaching net zero emissions by specific target date with their trajectory reflecting the level of development and emissions produced by health sector, as well as national emissions targets under the Paris Agreement.
The need to rethink the role of resilience knowledge and practices, in order to ensure the performance of built environment meet the health-related criteria and a way regenerating nature.
Creativity and innovation of technology contributing to improve the global environment across various sectors. A wide array of technologies such as Internet of Things (IoT), Artificial Intelligence (AI), data analytics, can be leveraged to create, expand and monitor the effectiveness of sustainable development and environmental in compliance with health system.
Financial incentives through government policy and market-based approaches, which can be implemented and monitored by charging a price on environmental and social costs, such as renewable resources deployment and pollution reduction.
EXPECTED OUTCOME
Ensuring equitable access to health services for all through the promotion of science, technology, and innovation in the health sector for all, provision of
treatment and prevention, including the enhancement of community’s understanding for proper behavior in preventing pandemic outbreaks, improvement of interconnected health systems, development of digital
health and its infrastructure, telemedicine, geospatial sensor, as well as expansion of public healthcare, including value-based health care (VBHC) and Universal Health Coverage (UHC) to reach the SDGs target.
Level of commitment of health system of countries to develop action plan for a low carbon sustainable health sector, that aligns with the Paris Agreement and also contributes to greater resilience: reaching net zero emissions by specific target date with their trajectory reflecting the level of development and emissions produced by health sector, as well as national emissions targets under the Paris Agreement.
The need to rethink the role of resilience knowledge and practices, in order to ensure the performance of built environment meet the health-related criteria and a way regenerating nature.
Creativity and innovation of technology contributing to improve the global environment across various sectors. A wide array of technologies such as Internet of Things (IoT), Artificial Intelligence (AI), data analytics, can be leveraged to create, expand and monitor the effectiveness of sustainable development and environmental in compliance with health system.
Financial incentives through government policy and market-based approaches, which can be implemented and monitored by charging a price on environmental and social costs, such as renewable resources deployment and pollution reduction.
Priority Issue 3
Bolstering Muti-, Inter-, and Trans-disciplinary Science and Technology For Climate Change and Pandemic Preparedness
Multi-, inter- and trans-disciplinary approaches in preventing, preparing for, and responding to global crisis (eg. pandemics and climate change, require that engage different sectors and actors such as governments, business, and civil society along with researchers and scientific bodies to work together on a common agenda of prevention, adaptation, and mitigation of risks and impact.
Multi-, Inter- and trans-disciplinary solutions-oriented innovative research across spatial / temporal scales, to identify health-promoting, cost-effective patterns of development, to realize co-benefits for health, environment, and economy, and to identify effective policy and governance strategies, to shape healthy and sustainable settings that manage short- and long-term risks.
Enhancing partnership and collaborative processes from all stakeholders to shape the acceleration and adoption of technologies for environmental regeneration and quality of life improvement. Policy makers, business practitioners, scientists, and smart societies should be working together to add sustainable value and reinforce the positive aspects of technology’s effect on the environment.
EXPECTED OUTCOME
Preventing, preparing for, and responding to global health crisis such as pandemics and climate change require multisectoral and multidisciplinary approaches that engage different sectors and actors such as governments, business, and civil society along with researchers and scientific bodies to work together on a common agenda of prevention, adaptation, and mitigation of risks and impact.
A Transdisciplinary, solutions-oriented innovative research across spatial and temporal scales to identify health-promoting, cost-effective patterns of development to realize co-benefits for health, environment, and economy, and to identify effective policy and governance strategies to shape healthy and sustainable settings that manage short and long-term risks.
To promote sustainable transitions, transdisciplinary science should be committed to inclusivity, equity, co-production, and scientific rigor.
Priority Issue 4
Guarantee the People are at the Center
Strong commitment from all nations, all segments of society, to individual level, to improve people’s adaptation and mitigation abilities, towards climate change and climate variability, as well as alleviating negative consequences on the planet’s sustainability, people’s prosperity and health.
Urgent need to understand diversity communities in taking actions to approach them; efforts to advance and strengthen people’s capability to manage better their practices, in particular avoiding any risks and hazards of climate change, with interdisciplinary collaboration between different scientific endeavours and transdisciplinary engagements with various parties.
People’s inclusion and participation through a dialogic communication within a long-term educational commitment, to build up new ways of learning and responses to climate change and climate variability.
Holistic understandings and identifications of solutions on coping with the problems faced by humanity at large, with multi-, inter-, and even trans-disciplinary approaches.
EXPECTED OUTCOME
Improved people’s adaptation and mitigation abilities towards climate change and climate variability, as well as alleviating negative consequences on the planet’s sustainability, people’s prosperity and health, need a stronger commitment from all nations rich and poor down to the individual level to include all segments of society at large.
Priority Issue 5
Strengthening the Nexus Between Data-research-policy-practice for Climate Change and Pandemic Preparedness
Strengthening the value of evidence-based policy making, where science /scientific data led policy decision-making are able to enjoy the benefits of overcoming, even if only temporarily, allowable social economic activities.
Translating a rapidly evolving body of new data/ evidence into tangible response of efforts, and health policy decisions received unprecedented public attention, which are challenges faced by policy-makers, healthcare providers, and research actors. The evidence of COVID-19 pandemic marks a turning point for evidence-informed health policy- and decision-making.
Trusted relationships and dedicated governance structures for agile knowledge translation existed, to play a key role for promoting the use of best available data/evidence for responsive and timely decision making; to translate the latest global evidence into national health policy and programmes.
EXPECTED OUTCOME
Institutionalization of a sustainable evidence-informed policy-making at country level.
A leverage in evidence-informed policy-making beyond global health emergencies at global, regional, and national levels.
Capacity building to manage infodemics.