Public and Planetary Health Systems
The big question is: How can we design systems that support all life, not extract, exploit or colonize life?
- What does the connection between public health and planetary health really mean?
How are human health, ecological health, climate stability, biodiversity, food, water, housing, and community well-being part of one connected system? - What is broken in the current health system?
Where are the biggest failures: pollution, chronic disease, climate exposure, food systems, toxic chemicals, poor housing, weak prevention, ecosystem destruction, or treating illness after harm has already happened? - What systems change is needed now?
What has to change in healthcare, urban planning, food and water systems, energy, transportation, housing, education, public policy, and economic design? - Where are public and planetary health solutions already working?
Can you point to communities, cities, Indigenous-led initiatives, health systems, farms, schools, or public agencies that are improving human and ecological health together? - What can people do where they are now?
What are practical first steps for families, schools, neighborhoods, healthcare providers, small businesses, nonprofits, local governments, and community groups? - How do we move from treating sickness to designing for health?
What would it look like to prevent illness by improving air, water, food, housing, mobility, nature access, social connection, and local resilience? - Which health risks are rising because ecological systems are under stress?
How should communities understand the links between heat, flooding, wildfire smoke, air pollution, water contamination, vector-borne disease, food insecurity, and mental health? - How can healthcare become a force for planetary health?
What can hospitals, clinics, insurers, medical schools, public health agencies, and care providers do to reduce harm and build healthier local systems? - What policies, investments, or partnerships would unlock faster progress?
What should governments, health systems, schools, planners, funders, businesses, and community organizations do now to align public health with ecological restoration? - What is the story people need to hear?
How do we help people move from fear, illness, and ecological grief to practical action, prevention, community care, and confidence that healthier systems are possible?
