What people had to say about Sustaining a Healthy Future

Click on the organisation name below to see what people have to say about Sustaining a Healthy Future and sustainable development and read the joint statement: It's Time to Take Action on Climate Change [pdf]

 

  • Association of Directors of Public Health

    In one hundred years' time, it is almost inconceivable that the ever growing numbers of us will be able to consume at the present rate. Sustainable development should be the mantra that we infuse into our children and our children's children.

    Dr Tim Crayford
    President, Association of Directors of Public Health

    Visit the Association of Directors of Public Health website.

  • British Trust for Conservation Volunteers

    BTCV recognise the challenges which climate change present to everyone's health and wellbeing. This guide, and programmes such as the BTCV Green Gym, help people take positive action and make a real difference to the world in which they live, work and enjoy.

    Mr Tom Flood CBE
    Chief Executive, British Trust for Conservation Volunteers

    Visit the BTCV website.

  • Carbon Trust

    To proactively manage carbon emissions it is vital that NHS Trusts assign suitable resources to track and reduce emissions across the full range of their organisation’s activity. Successful reduction strategies rely on sustained senior management commitment to enable change across the organisation. Those organisation’s leading the way have a plan that not only targets their own direct emissions but also looks to engage with patients, neighbouring businesses and other local public sector organisations.

    Tom Cumberledge
    Carbon Trust

    Visit the BTCV website.

  • Chartered Institute of Environmental Health

    Climate change will impact on our lives, our health and our very existence over the coming decades. It is the responsibility of all organisations to reach out to their communities and stakeholders and give them the tools to help reduce the causes and mitigate the effects. This guide is one of the first of many to address the policy and practical challenges we face – use it, urgently!

    Mr Graham Jukes
    Chief Executive, Chartered Institute of Environmental Health

    Visit the CIEH website.

  • Climate & Health Council

    This pamphlet will be of immediate and practical use for all those health professionals who wish to be part of the solution to climate change. It will, I am sure, play an important role in amplifying the health professional voice in this most critical of issues to face the 21st Century.

    Dr Robin Stott
    Chair, Climate and Health Council

    Visit the Climate & Health Council website.

  • Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment

    Visit the CABE website.

  • Institute of Public Health in Ireland

    Climate change will impact on our lives, our health and our very existence over the coming decades. [We] welcome this guide which outlines the issues which we all need to face up to in taking action to create a sustainable environment. As in many other areas of public health the impact will be felt most greatly by people in vulnerable groups. Our main focus must be to ensure that improving equity in health is at the forefront of our action. We want to support other colleagues in the UK and internationally to tackle one of the most significant issues in public health.

    Prof Jane Wilde
    Chief Executive, Institute of Public Health in Ireland

    Visit the IPH website.

  • Local Government Association

    Visit the LGA website.

  • Neil McKay, Chief Executive, NHS East of England

    The impact of climate change on communities has never been starker. The NHS, as a major consumer of resources and as leaders with our partners in protecting and improving the health and wellbeing of the population, needs to be at the centre of developing strategies to sustain a healthy future.

    This responsibility is widely recognised but there is still much to be done to help the NHS community to understand, in a practical sense, how to fulfil this responsibility. This guide to tackling climate change, published by the Faculty of Public Health is an excellent contribution to the resources available to the NHS to help understand the impact of climate change on communities and how the NHS can deliver its contribution. It should be essential reading to anyone involved in the development of local policies to sustain healthy futures.

  • National Heart Forum

    Visit the NHF website.

  • NHS Confederation

    TThe NHS has a major role to play to help tackle climate change. This report shows that by addressing some key aspects such as energy use, transport and waste the NHS can have a considerable impact on reducing its carbon footprint.

    Dr Gill Morgan
    Chief Executive, NHS Confederation

    Visit the NHSConfed website.

  • Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh

    Sustaining a Healthy Future lays out the challenge, the evidence and the potential health benefits and the check lists offer us all a way forward. The NHS, as an employer, educator and consumer has a real opportunity to make an impact. I would hope this guide can help stimulate action.

    Neil Douglas
    President, Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh

    Visit the RCPE website.

  • Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow

    "The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow is happy to support the major themes of the Faculty of Public Health document "Sustaining a Healthy Future: A guide to tackling climate change".

    Prof Paul Knight
    Registrar, Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow

    Visit the RCPSG website.

  • Royal College of Physicians of London

    The global impact of climate change is a topic which is never far from all our minds or out of the media. Importantly it is an area where physicians can play a leading role in advocating responsible action. The Faculty of Public Health's guide to tackling climate change - Sustaining a Healthy Future - is a major contribution to the topic. The guide sets out a series of practical steps doctors and others can take to improve and sustain public health. Bearing in mind the environmental challenges we are all facing, the guide will be a valuable resource for all NHS staff.

    Prof Ian Gilmore
    President, Royal College of Physicians of London

    Visit the RCP London website.

  • Royal Institute of Public Health

    Visit the RIPH website.

  • Royal Society of Health

    Visit the RSH London website.

  • Scottish Healthy Environment Network Steering Group

    The pocket guide helpfully and succinctly sets out the issues, and what we can do on an individual and organisational basis to address these issues. Its description of the clear links with health is very useful.

    Scottish Healthy Environment Network

    Visit the HEN website.

  • Sustain

    It's vital that the food served in publicly funded institutions - like hospitals, schools and care homes - is healthy, sustainable and delicious. If we don't provide good food there - for some of the most vulnerable in society - when are we going to provide it? Local, fresh products, traded fairly, and produced to high standards that protect animal welfare and the environment, can also stimulate the local economy, as well as tickle the tastebuds. It's time to move from isolated examples of good practice, towards making sustainable food procurement routine.

    Anne Dolamore
    Chair, Sustain

    Visit the Sustain website.

  • Sustainable Development Commission

    Sustaining a Healthy Future recognises the challenge that climate change poses to health, and the vital role the health sector must play in taking action against it.

    Anna Coote
    Commissioner for Health, Sustainable Development Commission

    Visit the SDC website.

  • Sustrans

    Climate change and obesity are the two great policy challenges of our age. This means that sustainable development and healthy living are now policy priorities. We are so pleased to see the Faculty taking the lead in this area, and wholeheartedly support the new guide.

    John Grimshaw
    Chief Executive, Sustrans

    Visit the Sustrans website.

  • UK Public Health Association

    The development of this guidance has been endorsed and promoted throughout the UKPHA's Climates & Change work and we are delighted that it will now be made available to a wider constituency.

    Angela Mawle
    Chief Executive, UK Public Health Association

    Visit the Sustrans website. The Association of Public Health Observatories (APHO) has been established since June 2000, and has a main focus of facilitating collaborative working of the ten Public Health Observatories (PHOs) in England and Wales. Visit the Association of Public Health Observatories website.

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