Recommended citation

Berry, P., & Schnitter, R. (Eds.). (2022). Health of Canadians in a Changing Climate: Advancing our Knowledge for Action. Ottawa, ON: Government of Canada.

EDITED BY

  • Peter Berry (Health Canada)
  • Rebekka Schnitter (Health Canada )

AUTHORS

  • Peter Berry (Health Canada)
  • Phil Blagden (Health Canada)
  • Céline Campagna (Institut national de santé publique du Québec and Centre Terre, Eau, Environnement of the Institut national de la recherche scientifique)
  • Marika Egyed (Health Canada)
  • Paddy Enright (Health Canada and University of Waterloo)
  • Pierre Gosselin (Institut national de santé publique du Québec and Centre Terre, Eau, Environnement of the Institut national de la recherche scientifique)
  • Sherilee Harper (University of Alberta)
  • Katie Hayes (Health Canada and University of Toronto)
  • National Collaborating Centre for Indigenous Health with contributions from Donna Atkinson, Roberta Stout, Regine Halseth, and Margo Greenwood
  • Nicholas Ogden (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • Rebekka Schnitter (Health Canada)
  • Tim K. Takaro (Simon Fraser University)

CONTRIBUTORS

  • Lewis Archer (National Reconciliation Program at Save the Children)
  • Donna Atkinson (National Collaborating Centre for Indigenous Health)
  • Jura Augustinavicius (McGill University)
  • Amber Bedard (University of Calgary)
  • Peter Berry (Health Canada)
  • Catherine Bouchard (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • Gabrielle Brankston (University of Guelph)
  • Elizabeth Brown (Public Health Ontario)
  • Jordan Brubacher (Simon Fraser University)
  • Chris Buse (University of Northern British Columbia and University of British Columbia)
  • Céline Campagna (Institut national de santé publique du Québec and Centre Terre, Eau, Environnement of the Institut national de la recherche scientifique)
  • Susan Clayton (College of Wooster)
  • Christina Cook (University of British Columbia)
  • Tricia Corrin (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • Ashlee Cunsolo (Memorial University)
  • David Demers-Bouffard (Institut national de santé publique du Québec)
  • Antonia Dibernardo (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • Shawn Donaldson (Health Canada and Carleton University)
  • Michael A. Drebot (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • Gemma Dunn (Uisce (Ishka) Consulting International)
  • Betty Edwards (Health Canada)
  • Susan Elliott (University of Waterloo)
  • Paddy Enright (Health Canada and University of Waterloo)
  • Aamir Fazil (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • David N. Fisman (University of Toronto)
  • Mike Flannigan (University of Alberta)
  • Manon Fleury (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • James Ford (University of Leeds)
  • Eleni Galanis (British Columbia Centre for Disease Control and University of British Columbia)
  • Lindsay Galway (Lakehead University)
  • Pierre Gosselin (Institut national de santé publique du Québec and Centre Terre, Eau, Environnement of the Institut national de la recherche scientifique)
  • Amy Greer (University of Guelph)
  • Regine Halseth (National Collaborating Centre for Indigenous Health)
  • Carla Hilario (University of Alberta)
  • Emily Jenkins (University of Saskatchewan)
  • Daniel Jubas-Malz (University Health Network)
  • Nia King (Queen’s University)
  • Tom Kosatsky (British Columbia Centre for Disease Control)
  • Julianne Kus (University of Toronto)
  • Eric Lavigne (Health Canada)
  • Patrick A. Leighton (Université de Montréal and CIUSSS du Centre-Sud-de-l’Île-de-Montréal)
  • Alexandra Lesnikowski (Concordia University)
  • Robbin Lindsay (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • Benny Ling (Health Canada)
  • Diana Valencia Lopez (Health Canada)
  • Ann-Marie Lowe (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • Antoinette Ludwig (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • Catherine Macdonald (Alliance for Healthier Communities)
  • Morgan MacNeill (Health Canada)
  • Paul Makar (Environment and Climate Change Canada)
  • Maria Malik (Canadian Food Inspection Agency)
  • Carlyn Matz (Health Canada)
  • Deborah McGregor (York University)
  • Lorraine McIntyre (British Columbia Centre for Disease Control)
  • Ericha Moores (Natural Resources Canada)
  • Shaun K. Morris (University of Toronto)
  • Tyrone Munroe (Four Arrows Regional Health Authority)
  • Hannah Tait Neufeld (University of Waterloo)
  • Victoria Ng (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • Jolly Noor (University of Waterloo)
  • Jaclyn Paterson (Health Canada)
  • Radenko Pavlovic (Environment and Climate Change Canada)
  • Melissa Perri (University of Toronto)
  • David Plummer (Environment and Climate Change Canada)
  • Sami Qutob (Health Canada)
  • Jacinthe Racine (Environment and Climate Change Canada)
  • Pierre Raymond (Health Canada)
  • Jérôme Ribesse (Synergie Santé Environnement)
  • Gabrielle Richards (University of Ottawa)
  • Robyn Rittmaster (Health Canada)
  • Rebekka Schnitter (Health Canada)
  • Shanaya Singh (Health Canada)
  • Ben Smith (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • Roberta Stout (National Collaborating Centre for Indigenous Health)
  • Rebecca Stranberg (Health Canada)
  • Denise Thomson (University of Alberta)
  • Linda Varangu (Canadian Coalition for Green Health Care)
  • Marielle Verret (Health Canada)
  • Linda Vrbova (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • Lisa Waddell (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • Shannon Waters (Vancouver Coastal Health)
  • Aaron Wilson (Health Canada)
  • Heidi Wood (Public Health Agency of Canada)
  • Guoliang Xi (Health Canada)

Acknowledgements

The Climate Change and Health Innovation Bureau at Health Canada gratefully acknowledges the contribution of the following people in assisting in the development of assessment chapters.

Amreen Babujee, Katharine Neale, Alexandra Sawatzky, Francesca Cardwell, Robyn Hocking

Carolyn Brown is gratefully acknowledged for the contributions to technical writing and editing activities that made this publication possible.

Reviewers

The Climate Change and Health Innovation Bureau at Health Canada gratefully acknowledges the contribution of the following people in providing guidance, reviewing chapters and providing written comments.

Bryan Adlard, Abdul Afghan, Christina Ameni, Eric Aubin, Helen Berry, Sonya Billiard, Barrie Bonsal, Elizabeth Bush, Tia Caprino, Anne Castelino, Keith Chau, Jade Craig-Payette, Ashlee Cunsolo, Angie Daze, Rob de loe, Chris Derksen, Warren Dodd, Patricia D’Onghia, Helen Doyle, Monica Dutt,, Kris Ebi, Elizabeth Elliott, Neville Ellis, Marjorie Emmanuel, Neal Fann, Victor Gallant, Frank Geraghty, Zoe Gillespie, Nela Gojevic, Michelle Hooper, Courtney Howard, Kristen Howe, Dave Hutton, Cheryl Khoury, Richard King, Megan Kirchmerier-Young, Christina Lee Fuller, Sarah Levitt, Johanna MacDonald, Carly Matz, Stephanie McFayden, Deborah McGregor, Jeremy McNeil, Natasha Mohammed, Asish Mohapatra, Andy Morse, Pemma Muzumdar, Erin Myers, Meghan Myles, Chad Nelson, Simon Otto, Claudel Pétrin-Desrosiers, Bruno Pilote, David Plummer, Dominique Poulin, Kim Raine, François-Nicolas Robinne, Pablo Romero-Barrios, Daniel Rosenbaum, Rainer Sauerborn, Ryan Schwartz, Tina Sheppard, Raquel Silva, Kelly Skinner, Victoria Tunstall, David Turcotte, Eduardo Vides, Sonia Wesche, Kyle Whyte, Kara Williamson, Britt Wray, and Xuebin Zhang.

Secretariat and Peer Review Coordination

Rebekka Schnitter, Peter Berry, Jolly Noor, and Brianna Dukeshire

Why This Assessment Is Needed

The rapid rate of global climate change and diminishing opportunity to keep warming below 1.5°C (IPCC, 2018) has increased awareness of the urgent need to prepare for climate change impacts on health and to mitigate climate change (WHO, 2018). Near-term reductions in greenhouse gases (GHGs) will not prevent further warming of the globe in the next few decades; increased efforts are needed to adapt to protect all Canadians from the associated health impacts (WHO, 2013; Smith et al., 2014; Watts et al., 2018). In many important areas, progress has been made globally to prepare individuals and health systems for climate change impacts, but a significant adaptation gap exists in many countries (Martinez & Berry, 2018).

Health authorities, researchers, and individual Canadians are seeking information about the way climate change is currently affecting health and is projected to do so in the future. Many local health units have undertaken assessments of climate change, health vulnerability, and adaptation and have begun taking measures to protect health. The number of decision makers requiring the latest scientific evidence of health threats from climate change is expanding, with new programs at local to national levels to support efforts to prepare for impacts. An example is Health Canada’s climate change and health capacity building program, HealthADAPT, launched in 2018 (Government of Canada, 2019).

At the same time, attribution studies have forged a causal link between climate change and health effects associated with specific events, and the urgency of efforts to better understand climate change impacts has increased, with international studies suggesting that even modest increases in temperature, expected in the next few decades, are associated with significant health impacts (IPCC, 2018). Scientists have also cautioned about possible limits to health adaptation (Watts et al., 2015; IPCC, 2018) under current rates of warming.

This assessment, Health of Canadians in a Changing Climate: Advancing our Knowledge for Action, is the first comprehensive study of current and projected risks from climate change to the health of Canadians since 2008. It was developed by a team of more than 80 subject matter experts from regional and federal health authorities and academic institutions across Canada. It addresses the evolving knowledge needs of government decision makers, civil society organizations, and individual Canadians by providing evidence-based and, where possible, quantitative information to help people understand how Canada’s climate is changing, and the effects on health and health systems, including implications for those most at risk in society. For key risks to health, it also examines current efforts to prepare for climate change, from individual to national levels, and explores what further efforts are needed. The potential for very large co-benefits to health of well-designed measures to reduce GHGs are also explored in the report.

As part of the national assessment process, Canada in a Changing Climate (Natural Resources Canada, 2020), this study contributes to the broader understanding of climate change impacts and adaptation by the Government of Canada, including a focus on Canada’s changing climate (Bush & Lemmen, 2019), national issues, regional perspectives, and impacts on First Nations, Métis, and Inuit peoples and communities. The national assessment process is based on a broad partnership of subject-matter experts and assessment users from all orders of government, Indigenous organizations, universities, professional and non-governmental groups, and the private sector. It includes engagement through a National Advisory Committee and the Adaptation Platform and engages the public through meetings, conferences, and online engagement tools.

Report Format

The chapters in this report discuss relevant findings from the scientific literature on priority health risks related to climate change and on adaptation options for protecting health. Where information is available, chapters include quantitative projections of future health risks from climate change (see Chapter 5: Air Quality; Chapter 6: Infectious Diseases; Chapter 7: Water Quality, Quantity, and Security). The report includes analysis of the interplay between climate change and important determinants of health, which can affect adaptive capacity and health equity to influence vulnerability to health impacts (see Chapter 9: Climate Change and Health Equity). The assessment includes a separate chapter on climate change impacts on Indigenous Peoples’ health and includes information on these impacts throughout the full report (see Chapter 2: Climate Change and Indigenous Peoples’ Health in Canada). All chapters include illustrative case studies of actions being undertaken by health authorities to reduce risks to Canadians from climate change.

The report is structured as follows:

Chapter 1: Climate Change and Health Linkages — provides information on how Canada’s climate is changing and is projected to continue to change, to support the understanding of growing threats to health. It identifies the complex pathways through which climate change affects health and identifies key health risks facing Canadians.

Chapter 2: Climate Change and Indigenous Peoples’ Health in Canada — explores current impacts of climate change on the health of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples and communities. It highlights the role of current and legacy impacts of colonialism, racism, and discrimination in contributing to these impacts and highlights, through a number of case studies, the strengths and resilience of Indigenous Peoples in planning for the impacts.

Chapter 3: Natural Hazards — reviews evidence of how natural hazards are affected by climate change and their impacts on the mental, social, and physical health of Canadians. It then provides information about effective adaptation strategies for reducing risks and the co-benefits of undertaking these measures. It proposes research directions to address key knowledge gaps in this field.

Chapter 4: Mental Health and Well-Being — discusses current evidence of the mental health impacts of climate variability and change on Canadians, including regions and populations at higher risk for such impacts. It highlights important factors that support psychosocial well-being and adaptation options for preparing for climate change and limiting impacts from current hazards.

Chapter 5: Air Quality — examines the linkages between climate change and air quality in Canada, including how the health of populations could be affected by changes in air quality under various climate scenarios. The chapter also discusses the health co-benefits associated with efforts to mitigate GHG emissions and adaptation options for protecting Canadians from climate change impacts.

Chapter 6: Infectious Diseases — highlights the impacts of climate change on risks from infectious diseases of importance for public health in Canada, including those that are current, known disease risks (e.g., Lyme disease, West Nile virus) and new risks that may emerge. It then discusses adaptation to reduce climate-related infectious diseases, including their importance for populations at increased risk and the capacity of health systems to take needed actions. Existing research gaps are highlighted for the reader.

Chapter 7: Water Quality, Quantity, and Security — describes the relationship between climate change and the water cycle in Canada and attendant risks to the health of Canadians from impacts on water contamination, safety, and security. The vulnerability of drinking water systems, private wells, and Indigenous water systems is examined, and projected health risks from climate change are discussed. The chapter presents possible adaptations to reduce risks and important knowledge gaps in efforts to take actions.

Chapter 8: Food Safety and Security — presents existing evidence on the impacts of climate change on health through effects on food safety and security. It describes the nexus among climate change, the food system, and human health, as well as key drivers of poor health outcomes in Canada. Populations and regions at higher risk from impacts are discussed, along with options for adapting to future impacts.

Chapter 9: Climate Change and Health Equity — examines how important factors and trends at the individual, community, and health system levels can increase or decrease climate change risks to the health of Canadians. The implications of climate change for health equity are explored, along with measures to empower specific population groups to adapt. The chapter also provides tools and resources that support the integration of health equity considerations into climate change and health activities, such as vulnerability and adaptation assessments, and the adaptation design and evaluation process.

Chapter 10: Adaptation and Health System Resilience — provides an overview of adaptation as the key response to climate change impacts on the health of Canadians and discusses the importance of mainstreaming climate information into existing policies and planning, adaptation to future climate change conditions, and the possible limits to adaptation. The status of health adaptation in Canada is investigated, along with evidence of climate change impacts on health systems, trends in health system vulnerability, and new tools that health authorities can use to build resilience.

Guide to the Report

This assessment builds on previous scientific studies and reports on risks to the health of Canadians so that government decision makers, health practitioners, researchers, and individual Canadians can take effective measures to protect health now and to prepare for future impacts. The Executive Summary provides a summary of the key findings from each chapter of the report to help readers to easily access information most relevant to their efforts to prepare for climate change.

Assessment Approach and Methods

Beginning in 2017, Health Canada led focus groups and bilateral meetings with health sector decision makers, civil society organizations, researchers, National Indigenous Organizations, and youth to receive input on conducting the assessment. Advice was provided on key health issues to be addressed in the report, effective engagement processes during the assessment, and communicating the final results. The discussions revealed a strong interest in gaining a greater understanding of emerging issues related to climate change impacts on mental health, health equity, and Canada’s health systems. In addition, partners highlighted the need for a strong focus on climate change impacts on the health of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples and their communities; the importance of Indigenous knowledge systems for adapting; and the requirement for full and meaningful engagement, inclusion, and leadership of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples to address climate change impacts. Partners also highlighted the strong desire to have this report include discussion of reducing GHG emissions as the key preventive approach to protecting health from climate change and of capturing the large health co-benefits of well-designed policies and measures.

The assessment builds on knowledge from the previous Government of Canada report, Canada in a Changing Climate: Sector Perspectives on Impacts and Adaptation (Chapter 7 Human Health; Berry et al., 2014), as well as the previous comprehensive national climate change assessment, Human Health in a Changing Climate: A Canadian Assessment of Vulnerabilities and Adaptive Capacity (Séguin, 2008). The report draws from a large body of scientific peer-reviewed research and other publicly available sources and is an evidence-based, mixed-methods study of the health and health system impacts from climate change in Canada. Authors compiled and assessed research to summarize the current state of science on priority health risks facing Canadians. The sources that informed this assessment included peer reviewed and grey literature in both English and French. There was no set cut-off period for the literature, although precedence was given to recent peer-reviewed literature and to seminal literature on the topic area published since the previous national climate change and health assessment, released in 2014.

While the geographic focus of this assessment is Canada, the authors draw upon the increasing number of studies at the local or regional levels in Canada and from analysis in other countries that are relevant for understanding impacts and adaptation options in Canada. The report was extensively reviewed by Canadian and international experts and federal health-portfolio partner departments; and a public review of the chapters was also undertaken.

Intersecting Factors that Increase Climate Change Vulnerability

Identifying intersecting factors that increase vulnerability to climate change impacts on health was a key objective of this assessment. Knowledge of these factors allows for the development of targeted adaptation measures that address challenges for individuals or health sector decision makers in protecting health from climate change. Each chapter includes discussion of factors that increase the risk of climate-related health impacts, and a full chapter is dedicated to this topic (see Chapter 9: Climate Change and Health Equity).

Uncertainty in the Analysis

Studies of climate change impacts on health are challenged by complex pathways and determinants — for example, factors related to personal behaviours, socio-economic conditions, and health system capacity. Through these pathways and determinants, individuals are exposed to climate hazards, respond to the threats, and experience effects on health. Exposures may be short-term and direct, as in the case of extreme heat events, or occur over longer time scales and be mediated by indirect factors related to physiological sensitivity and adaptive capacity. Analysis in this and previous Canadian assessments was hampered by Canada’s large geography and diverse population centres, including smaller populations in remote and Northern communities, and limitations associated with the completeness, comparability, and usability of available health and climate data (Seguin, 2008; Berry et al., 2014). Understanding the potentially severe health impacts of compounding, cascading, or cumulative climate change impacts (for example, the floods and wildfires that struck parts of British Columbia in quick succession in 2017) is a larger and even more complex challenge and was beyond the scope of this report.

The number of studies that project risks to the health of Canadians from climate-related hazards, such as wildfires, extreme heat, air pollution, infectious diseases, and water-borne diseases, have increased in the last decade. However, some health outcomes related to climate change, including impacts on mental health, health equity, health systems, and food insecurity, remain difficult to model because of complex and dynamic drivers or data limitations. Studies of projected health risks from climate change reported in this assessment often included new analysis or existing studies of future health outcomes based on low Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP 2.6), medium (RCP 4.5), and/or high (RCP 8.5) emissions scenarios. Projections from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 5 (CMIP5) using the RCPs 2.6, 4.5, and 8.5 are widely used and have undergone robust evaluation by the science community. Where possible, authors drew upon results of climate scenarios, models, and projections reported in Canada’s Changing Climate Report (Bush & Lemmen, 2019).

Economic estimates of climate change impacts on the health of populations and health systems, and of the costs of needed adaptation measures, are required for cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness analysis of measures to address climate change. This includes measures to adapt to health impacts and actions to prevent future climate change through GHG mitigation that may result in health co-benefits. A paucity of data still precludes rigorous economic analysis along the spectrum of health concerns facing Canadians from climate change. Selected examples and case studies of economic impacts (Chapter 5: Air Quality; Chapter 10: Adaptation and Health System Resilience) are included in this assessment report.

Assessment of confidence and uncertainty are critical elements of climate change and health scientific assessments. Uncertainty arose from data limitations related to a lack of spatial or temporal fit between climate and health information. It also arose from limitations or lack of models of relationships between climate and health (e.g., future mental health impacts), and lack of data integrated across disciplines and from projections of human behaviour (e.g., future adaptation actions by individuals). In this report, authors used standard language to communicate their confidence in the results, and the level of certainty or uncertainty. This was generally based on the amount of existing evidence to support a statement (e.g., number of studies), the quality of the evidence (e.g., based on an assessment of the credibility of the source authors and literature), and the relationships between observed and projected trends.

Research Needs

The assessment revealed that significant knowledge gaps remain about climate change impacts on health, vulnerabilities, and needed adaptations to reduce current impacts and avoid much more severe impacts in the future. Each chapter provides a list of research needed to build the integrated knowledge base to inform future policy decisions by local, regional, provincial, territorial, and national governments as they prepare for climate change.

Next

Executive Summary