Medical, nursing, and physician assistant student knowledge and attitudes toward climate change, pollution, and resource conservation in health care

Abstract Background Climate change and pollution generated by the health care sector impose significant public health burdens. This study aimed to assess medical, nursing and physician assistant student knowledge and attitudes regarding climate change, pollution from the health care sector, and resp...

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Main Authors: Emma C. Ryan, Robert Dubrow, Jodi D. Sherman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-06-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-020-02099-0
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spelling doaj-ac4aec89d45b4dbfb874338d536500492020-11-25T02:49:52ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202020-06-0120111410.1186/s12909-020-02099-0Medical, nursing, and physician assistant student knowledge and attitudes toward climate change, pollution, and resource conservation in health careEmma C. Ryan0Robert Dubrow1Jodi D. Sherman2Environmental Health Sciences, Yale School of Public HealthEnvironmental Health Sciences, Yale Center on Climate Change and Health, Yale School of Public HealthAnesthesiology, Environmental Health Sciences, Yale School of Medicine, Yale School of Public HealthAbstract Background Climate change and pollution generated by the health care sector impose significant public health burdens. This study aimed to assess medical, nursing and physician assistant student knowledge and attitudes regarding climate change, pollution from the health care sector, and responsibility for resource conservation within professional practice. Methods In February–March, 2018, medical, nursing, and physician assistant students at Yale University (1011 potential respondents) were sent a 17-question online Qualtrics survey. Data analysis included descriptive statistics, as well as Fisher’s exact test and logistic regression to assess associations between variables of interest and the personal characteristics of gender, age, geographic place of origin, school, and year in school (among medical students). Results The response rate was 28% (280 respondents). 90% felt that physicians, nurses, and physician assistants have a responsibility to conserve resources and prevent pollution within their professional practice. 63% agreed or strongly agreed that the relationship between pollution, climate change, and health should be covered in the classroom and should be reinforced in the clinical setting. 57% preferred or strongly preferred reusable devices. 91% felt lack of time and production pressure, and 85% believed that lack of education on disease burden stemming from health care pollution, were barriers to taking responsibility for resource conservation and pollution prevention. Women and physician assistant students exhibited a greater commitment than men and medical students, respectively, to address pollution, climate change, and resource conservation in patient care and professional practice. Conclusion We found that health professional students are engaged with the concept of environmental stewardship in clinical practice and would like to see pollution, climate change, and health covered in their curriculum. In order for this education to be most impactful, more research and industry transparency regarding the environmental footprint of health care materials and specific clinician resource consumption patterns will be required.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-020-02099-0Climate changePollutionHealth care systemMedical studentNursing studentPhysician assistant student
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emma C. Ryan
Robert Dubrow
Jodi D. Sherman
spellingShingle Emma C. Ryan
Robert Dubrow
Jodi D. Sherman
Medical, nursing, and physician assistant student knowledge and attitudes toward climate change, pollution, and resource conservation in health care
BMC Medical Education
Climate change
Pollution
Health care system
Medical student
Nursing student
Physician assistant student
author_facet Emma C. Ryan
Robert Dubrow
Jodi D. Sherman
author_sort Emma C. Ryan
title Medical, nursing, and physician assistant student knowledge and attitudes toward climate change, pollution, and resource conservation in health care
title_short Medical, nursing, and physician assistant student knowledge and attitudes toward climate change, pollution, and resource conservation in health care
title_full Medical, nursing, and physician assistant student knowledge and attitudes toward climate change, pollution, and resource conservation in health care
title_fullStr Medical, nursing, and physician assistant student knowledge and attitudes toward climate change, pollution, and resource conservation in health care
title_full_unstemmed Medical, nursing, and physician assistant student knowledge and attitudes toward climate change, pollution, and resource conservation in health care
title_sort medical, nursing, and physician assistant student knowledge and attitudes toward climate change, pollution, and resource conservation in health care
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Abstract Background Climate change and pollution generated by the health care sector impose significant public health burdens. This study aimed to assess medical, nursing and physician assistant student knowledge and attitudes regarding climate change, pollution from the health care sector, and responsibility for resource conservation within professional practice. Methods In February–March, 2018, medical, nursing, and physician assistant students at Yale University (1011 potential respondents) were sent a 17-question online Qualtrics survey. Data analysis included descriptive statistics, as well as Fisher’s exact test and logistic regression to assess associations between variables of interest and the personal characteristics of gender, age, geographic place of origin, school, and year in school (among medical students). Results The response rate was 28% (280 respondents). 90% felt that physicians, nurses, and physician assistants have a responsibility to conserve resources and prevent pollution within their professional practice. 63% agreed or strongly agreed that the relationship between pollution, climate change, and health should be covered in the classroom and should be reinforced in the clinical setting. 57% preferred or strongly preferred reusable devices. 91% felt lack of time and production pressure, and 85% believed that lack of education on disease burden stemming from health care pollution, were barriers to taking responsibility for resource conservation and pollution prevention. Women and physician assistant students exhibited a greater commitment than men and medical students, respectively, to address pollution, climate change, and resource conservation in patient care and professional practice. Conclusion We found that health professional students are engaged with the concept of environmental stewardship in clinical practice and would like to see pollution, climate change, and health covered in their curriculum. In order for this education to be most impactful, more research and industry transparency regarding the environmental footprint of health care materials and specific clinician resource consumption patterns will be required.
topic Climate change
Pollution
Health care system
Medical student
Nursing student
Physician assistant student
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-020-02099-0
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