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New expert advisory group to support Australian Government protect our health from climate change

Department of Health

The Australian Government has established an expert advisory group to provide advice on reducing the impacts of climate change on the nation’s health.

The Climate and Health Expert Advisory Group will also support implementation of Australia’s first ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Health and Climate Strategy, launched at COP28 in Dubai last December by Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care Ged Kearney.

The strategy is a whole-of-government plan to address the negative effects of climate change on health and wellbeing. It sets out actions to reduce the health system’s contribution to climate change and build a high-quality net-zero health system.

With more frequent and extreme climate events, climate change presents a serious health and wellbeing challenge to Australians. The World Health Organization has described climate change as the greatest threat to global health this century. Negative health effects include heat-related sickness and death, injuries and mental health impacts from extreme weather events, respiratory illness due to air pollution, and changes in the spread and risk of infectious diseases.

The advisory group is chaired by Assistant Minister Kearney. Other members include Professor Paul Kelly (Australia’s Chief Medical Officer and Head of the interim Australian Centre for Disease Control), health professionals, academic experts, and community representatives (see the full list below).

The advisory group will ensure the views of the health community are fed into the process of developing and implementing the government’s climate and health policies.

The advisory group held its first meeting this month and will meet at least 3 times a year. The group has discussed progress on implementing the strategy, and heard that over one-fifth of the key actions have been substantively implemented to date, including:

  • joining the World Health Organization’s Alliance for Transformative Action on Climate and Health
  • investing $5 million in climate and health research through the ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Health and Medical Research Council,
  • preparing new reports on opportunities to reduce health system greenhouse gas emissions from waste, food, and anaesthetic gases.

Quotes attributable to Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care Ged Kearney MP:

“With more frequent and extreme climate events, climate change is a serious challenge to the health of Australians. After a decade of inaction and dysfunction, we are taking decisive measures to protect our health system.

“Labor is taking action now to ensure our health system can respond to these threats. We also making sure we minimise our health system’s contribution to climate change.

“Since I launched the ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Health and Climate Strategy 6 months ago, we’ve made outstanding progress. The Climate and Health Expert Advisory Group will help build on this progress.

“We all have a shared goal is to protect all Australians from the severe health risks posed by climate change, and to make the health system as sustainable as possible.”

Members of the Climate and Health Expert Advisory Group

NameTitle and organisation
The Hon Ged Kearney MP (Chair)Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care
Professor Paul Kelly (Deputy Chair)Chief Medical Officer and Head of interim Australian Centre for Disease Control
Professor Lynne MaddenChair, Multi-College Advisory Committee on Climate Change and Health
Professor Jennifer MartinPresident, Royal Australasian College of Physicians
Professor Tarun WeeramanthriPresident, Public Health Association Australia
Dr Catherine PendreyChair, Climate and Environmental Medicine Special Interest Group, Royal Australian College of General Practitioners
Adjunct Associate Professor Rebecca HaddockExecutive Director of Knowledge Exchange

Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association

Ms Elizabeth de SomerCEO, Medicines Australia
Mr Jason KaraCEO, Catholic Health Australia
Dr Kate WylieExecutive Director, Doctors for the Environment Australia
Ms Michelle IslesCEO, Climate and Health Alliance
Professor Eugenie KayakProfessor of Sustainable Healthcare, University of Melbourne
Professor Kathryn BowenDeputy Director, Melbourne Climate Futures
Professor Sotiris VardoulakisDirector, Healthy Environments and Lives Network
Associate Professor Angie BoneAssociate Professor of Practice in Planetary Health, Monash Sustainable Development Institute
Professor Hilary BambrickDirector, ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Australian ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ University
Professor Alexandra BarrattProfessor of Public Health, University of Sydney
Associate Professor Steve MorrisCEO, Pharmaceutical Society of Australia
Mr Paul StewartCEO, The Lowitja Institute
Associate Professor Veronica MatthewsAssociate Professor, Centre for Rural Health at the University of Sydney
Mr Tom SymondsonCEO, Aged & Community Care Providers Association
Ms Jade GuiteraVice-President External, Australian Medical Students’ Association
Ms Roslyn MorganEnvironmental Health Officer, Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation
Professor Tracy Levett-JonesLead, Planetary Health for Nursing & Midwifery Research & Education Collaborative
Associate Professor Carolyn HullickChief Medical Officer, Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care
Professor Nick WattsDirector, Centre for Sustainable Medicine, ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ University of Singapore
Ms Doris WhitmoreInterim Chief Executive Officer, Asthma Australia

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