From Health Affairs Today <[email protected]>
Subject Communicating With People Who Are Skeptical Of Climate Change; Top Articles In December
Date December 28, 2020 9:00 PM
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**The Latest Research, Commentary, and News from Health Affairs**

**Monday, December 28, 2020**

IN THE JOURNAL

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH

Multisolving Innovations For Climate And Health: Message Framing To
Achieve Broad Public Support

By James W. Dearing and Maria Lapinski

Not everyone welcomes new programs, practices, policies, and
technologies that promise to mitigate carbon emissions. That's why
message framing matters, particularly when communicating with people who
are dismissive or skeptical of climate change. In a new commentary
article, Michigan State University professors James W. Dearing and Maria
Lapinski discuss the concept of "multisolving" and why focusing on
the health benefits of climate mitigation efforts is important for
achieving public support. Read More >>

HOT ARTICLES IN DECEMBER

Health Care Pollution And Public Health Damage In The United States: An
Update

By Matthew J. Eckelman, Kaixin Huang, Robert Lagasse, Emily Senay,
Robert Dubrow, and Jodi D. Sherman

Climate Migration And The Future Of Health Care

By Katharine Lawrence

Adding A Climate Lens To Health Policy In The United States

By Renee N. Salas, Tynan H. Friend, Aaron Bernstein, and Ashish K. Jha

Health Risks Due To Climate Change: Inequity In Causes And Consequences

By Kristie L. Ebi and Jeremy J. Hess

DataGraphic: Climate And Health

Read the December 2020 Table of Contents
.

Subscribe to Health Affairs for full journal access.

**A CLOSER LOOK**-Vaccine Equity

COVID-19 vaccinations have begun and so have discussions about how to
distribute vaccinations equitably. In a November 2018 journal article,
Angela Chang and coauthors argue that vaccine rollouts can be channels
for improving health equity, finding that vaccine programs can benefit
the poor more than the rich. Read their report estimating the health and
economic impacts of ten antigens and their corresponding vaccines

across forty-one low- and middle-income countries.

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