To close this module, we return to the first weeks of module one. Because the puzzle is even more complex. You have learned in module one that heat is just one of the aspects of climate change. This means that heat en health policies and activities, which should come together in an intersectoral HHAP are also part of a larger policy. The HHAP could or should again be integrated in broader policies concerning sustainability climate and green.   


 

Knowledge check: 

(insert h5p Module 5 knowledge check 5.4)

Source: Hatvani-Kovacs,G., Bush, J., Sharific, E. and Boland, J. (2018). Policy recommendations to increase urban heat stress resilience  In Urban Climate, vol. 25 pp 51-63. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.uclim.2018.05.001 

 

Hatvani-Kovacs,G., Bush, J., Sharific, E. and Boland, J. (2018). Policy recommendations to increase urban heat stress resilience  In Urban Climate, vol. 25 pp 51-63. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.uclim.2018.05.001 

 

Buse, K., Tomson, G., Kuruvilla, S., Mahmood, J., Alden, A., Meulen van der, M. Ottersen, O., Haines, A. (2022). Tackling the politics of intersectoral action for the health of people and planet. In BMJ 2022; 376.  doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj-2021-068124  BMJ 2022;376:e068124 

 

Van der Vliet, N., den Broeder, L., Romeo-Velilla, M. et al. Facilitators and barriers of intersectoral co-operation to promote healthier and more environmentally friendly behaviour: a qualitative evaluation through focus groups for the INHERIT project. BMC Public Health 22, 617 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-022-12974-8 

 


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