• Public health · Sep 2019

    Review

    The sustainable development goals provide an important framework for addressing dangerous climate change and achieving wider public health benefits.

    • S Morton, D Pencheon, and G Bickler.
    • Healthy and Sustainable Settings, University of Central Lancashire, UK. Electronic address: smorton4@uclan.ac.uk.
    • Public Health. 2019 Sep 1; 174: 65-68.

    ObjectivesTo suggest how public health systems and the health sector can utilise the United Nation (UN) sustainable development goals (SDGs) to address climate change and other threats to future health and deliver immediate public health benefits.Study Design And MethodsWe examined UN and World Health Organisation guidance on SDGs and other published texts on systems thinking, integration, universality and co-benefits.Results And ConclusionsThe UN SDGs are a set of globally agreed objectives to end poverty, protect all that makes the planet habitable and ensure that all people enjoy peace and prosperity. The SDGs integrate the three dimensions of sustainable development (economic, environmental and social), they apply to high-income countries as well as developing countries and there are mechanisms to hold countries to account. There are three crucial issues for public health. First, a systems approach to future proof health and social justice. Second, an evidence-based approach to aid communication, framing and engagement. And, third, the importance of interventions that deliver health co-benefits (i.e. both immediate and long-term benefits to health, equity and prosperity). The SDGs present public health professionals with an important opportunity to create the right conditions for a better future through the organised efforts of society.Copyright © 2019 The Royal Society for Public Health. All rights reserved.

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