Occupational Therapy and Climate Change


What is Occupational Therapy?

Occupational therapy (OT) is the therapeutic use of everyday occupations with persons, groups, or populations (i.e. clients) for the purpose of enhancing or enabling participation (American Occupational Therapy Association, 2020).

Occupations are everyday activities that people do as individuals, in families, and in the community to occupy time and bring meaning and purpose to life (AOTA, 2020). Occupational therapy practitioners enhance or enable participation by understanding and integrating the relationship between the client, the client’s engagement in meaningful occupations, and the context in which occupations take place to develop occupation-based interventions (AOTA, 2020).


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What is Climate Change?

Climate change is a warming of our planet caused by a buildup of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, from the burning of fossil fuels for energy and human activities.  

When the sun heats the earth, part of that heat gets trapped in the atmosphere by naturally occurring gases. Certain gases like carbon dioxide get released by human activity and get trapped in the atmosphere. These gases prevent the heat from the sun escaping as much as it normally would, and lead to a warmer planet. 

For many thousands of years the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere remained about the same, which allowed the climate to stay stable, but as humans started burning coal, oil and gas to produce energy, they released large amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Since scientists started measuring carbon dioxide levels of the atmosphere in the 1950s, the levels of carbon dioxide have climbed more than 30%.


Scientists have ruled out natural cycles as the cause of this increase as they are not enough to explain that rapid increase in carbon dioxide. Human activities such as farming, transportation, heating our buildings, and creating goods are the cause of the increased levels of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. According to the fifth assessment from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, “it is extremely likely that human influence has been the dominant cause of the observed warming since the mid-20th century’. Industrialized nations, consume much more per person than developing countries and as a result have a much greater impact on the climate.

Consequences of Climate Change

Climate change is altering our environment and significantly affecting our health. The changes brought about by global warming have substantially altered the planet’s natural ecosystems and human health.

Effects on the environment

  • loss of biodiversity

  • rapid deforestation

  • large wildfires

  • rise in sea level

  • increased droughts

  • declining pollinators

  • floods

  • greater extreme weather events

Effects on humans

  • increased respiratory illness from air pollution

  • forced migration as a result of major storms or wildfires

  • mental health consequences from fearing for our future

  • limits in food supply caused by extreme weather

  • financial insecurity from forced migration or healthcare bills


How is Occupational Therapy Linked to Climate Change?

Occupational therapy holds unique values and, subsequently, unique roles like assessing, facilitating, modifying, and upholding occupation. As healthcare professionals, occupational therapists are invested in creating the best health outcomes for their clients. Climate change has immediate and direct consequences on our clients’ health. Increasingly common heat waves, floods, and droughts prevent humans from engaging in meaningful and valued occupations. A survey by The Medical Society Consortium on Climate & Health (2015) found that a majority of physicians are already seeing climate-related health harms in their patients --” most commonly in the form of increased cardiorespiratory disease (related to air quality and heat), more severe and longer-lasting allergy symptoms, and injuries attributed to extreme weather” (paragraph 3). Scientific American notes that “heat affects every part of our body. It can lead to heat exhaustion, heat stroke, anxiety, impaired cognitive function, and even premature death from heart and lung disease” (Tummala, 2020, paragraph 4).

We acknowledge that the health burden of degraded natural resources disproportionately affects marginalized people and future generations who are least responsible for environmental changes. Our advocacy and allyship will always fall short of creating a society in which all members of “diverse communities…. can function [and] flourish… regardless of age, gender identity, sexual orientation, race, religion, origin, socioeconomic status, [and] degree of ability” (AOTA, 2020b, p.2) if we do not consider the role and effects of the global environment. 

Human occupation is directly linked to climate change as its cause and the root of all solutions. As the healthcare providers who consider the role of occupation in health, it is our responsibility to consider our role guiding occupational choices. Moreover, the environment is already a fundamental part of OT theory and practice. The Occupational Therapy Practice Framework (AOTA, 2020a) describes occupation as occurring within a context that includes the natural environment and human-made changes to the environment.  In addition, every occupational therapy model includes the environment as a factor. For example, the Model of Human Occupation (MOHO), Person-Environment-Occupation-Performance (PEOP), the Canadian Model of Occupational Participation (CanMOP), Occupational Adaptation, and the Kawa Model all include the role of the environment in human health. While traditionally the environment component of these models has focused more on a client's immediate or built environment, the models are evolving to consider the impact of the global natural environment, alternatively named the macro environment context in the CanMOP. Some of the models now include examples of the impact of climate change or climate crisis in their textbooks to illustrate how climate emergencies affect people with disabilities and health conditions. 

Around the country, the health impact of the climate crisis is necessitating thousands of healthcare providers, including doctors, pharmacists, therapists, and medical students, to become advocates for change (Tummala, 2020).  If we are to remain current, occupational therapy needs to align with those healthcare providers who have already taken a stand against the worst threat to our clients’ health of the century. Climate change is a public health issue and we have an ethical and moral imperative to address it.


Sources

American Occupational Therapy Association (2020a). Occupational therapy practice framework: Domain and process (4th ed.). American Journal of Occupational Therapy, 74(Suppl. 2), 7412410010. https://doi.org/10.5014/ajot.2020.74S2001

Citizen’s Climate Lobby. (2021). Laser Talk: The Basic Science of Climate Change. https://citizensclimatelobby.org/laser-talks/basic-science-climate-change/

Fritze, J., Blashki, G., Burke, S., & Wiseman, J. Hope, despair and transformation: Climate change and the promotion of mental health and wellbeing. International Journal of Mental Health Systems, 2(13), 13-13. https://doi.org/10.1186/1752-4458-2-13

Hudson, M. J., & Aoyama, M. (2008). Occupational therapy and the current ecological crisis. British Journal of Occupational Therapy, 71(12), 545-548.  https://doi.org/10.1177/030802260807101210

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) (2013). IPCC Fifth Assessment Report.  Center for Climate and Energy Solutions. https://www.c2es.org/content/ipcc-fifth-assessment-report/

The Medical Society Consortium on Climate & Health (2015). About.  https://medsocietiesforclimatehealth.org/about/

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. (2021). Climate Change. https://www.niehs.nih.gov/health/topics/agents/climate-change/index.cfm

Planetary Health Alliance (2021).  https://www.planetaryhealthalliance.org/planetary-health

Tummala, N. (2020, August 29). What climate change does to the human body. Scientific American.  https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/what-climate-change-does-to-the-human-body/ 

Tummala, N. (2020, August 29). What climate change does to the human body. Scientific American. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/what-climate-change-does-to-the-human-body/

United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) (2020). https://www.unhcr.org/en-us/