Tag: resilience

  • Health at COP29: Workforce crisis meets climate crisis

    Health at COP29: Workforce crisis meets climate crisis

    Health workers are already being transformed by climate change. COP29 stakeholders can either support this transformation to strengthen health systems, or risk watching the health workforce collapse under mounting pressures.

    The World Health Organization’s “COP29 Special Report on Climate Change and Health: Health is the Argument for Climate Action“ highlights the health sector’s role in climate action.

    Health professionals are eyewitnesses and first responders to climate impacts on people and communities firsthand – from escalating respiratory diseases to spreading infections and increasing humanitarian disasters.

    The report positions health workers as “trusted members of society” who are “uniquely positioned” to champion climate action.

    The context is stark: WHO projects a global shortage of 10 million health workers by 2030, with six million in climate-vulnerable sub-Saharan Africa. Meanwhile, our communities and healthcare systems already bear the costs of climate change through increasing disease burdens and system strain.

    Health workers are responding, because they have to. Their daily engagement with climate-affected communities offers insights that can strengthen both health systems and climate response – if we learn to listen.

    A “fit-for-purpose” workforce requires rethinking learning and leadership

    WHO’s report acknowledges that “scale-up and increased investments are necessary to build a well-distributed, fit-for-purpose workforce that can meet accelerating needs, especially in already vulnerable settings.” The report emphasizes that “governments and partners must prioritize access to decent jobs, resources, and support to deliver high-quality, climate-resilient health services.” This includes ensuring “essential protective equipment, supplies, fair compensation, and safe working conditions such as adequate personnel numbers, skills mix, and supervisory capacity.”

    Resources, skills, and supervision are building blocks of every health system.

    They are necessary but likely to be insufficient.

    Such investments could be maximized through cost-effective, scalable peer learning networks that enable rapid knowledge sharing and solution development – as well as their locally-led implementation.

    The WHO report calls for “community-led initiatives that harness local knowledge and practices.”

    Our analyses – formed by listening to and learning from thousands of health professionals participating in the Teach to Reach peer learning platform – suggest that the expertise developed by health professionals through daily engagement with communities facing climate impacts is key to problem-solving, to implementing local solutions, and to ensure that communities are part and parcel of such solutions.

    Why move beyond seeing health workers as implementers of policies or recipients of training?

    We stand to gain much more if their leadership is recognized, nurtured, and supported.

    This is a notion of leadership that diverges from convention: if health workers have leadership potential, it is because they are uniquely positioned to turn what they know – because they are there every day – into action.

    Peer learning has the potential to significantly accelerate progress toward country and global goals for climate change and health.

    By making connections, a health professional expands the horizon of what they are able to know.

    At the Geneva Learning Foundation, we have seen that such leadership emerges when health workers are empowered to:

    • share and validate their experiential knowledge;
    • develop, test, and implement solutions with the communities they serve, using local resources;
    • connect with peers facing similar challenges; and
    • inform policy based on ground-level realities.

    Working with a global community of community-based health workers, we co-developed the Teach to Reach platform, community, and network to listen and learn at scale. Unlike traditional training programs, Teach to Reach creates a peer learning ecosystem where:

    • Health workers from over 70 countries connect directly to share experiences.
    • Solutions are crowdsourced from those closest to the challenges.
    • Knowledge flows horizontally rather than just vertically.
    • Local innovations are rapidly shared and adapted across contexts.

    For example, in June 2024, over 21,000 health professionals participated in Teach to Reach 10, generating hundreds of real-world stories and insights about climate change impacts on health.

    The platform has proven particularly valuable in fragile contexts and resource-limited settings, where traditional capacity building approaches often struggle to reach or engage health workers effectively.

    This approach does not replace formal institutions or traditional scientific methods – instead, it creates new pathways for knowledge to flow rapidly between communities, while building the collective capacity needed to respond to accelerating climate impacts on health.

    Already, this demonstrates the untapped potential for health workers to contribute to our collective understanding and response.

    But we do not stop there.

    As we count down to Teach to Reach 11, participants are now sharing how they have actually used and applied this peer knowledge to make progress against their local challenges.

    They cannot do it alone.

    This is why we ask global partners to join and contribute to this emergent, locally-led leadership for change.

    How different is this ‘ask’ from that of global partners asking health workers to contribute to the climate change and health agenda?

    WHO’s COP29 report makes a powerful case that “community-led initiatives that harness local knowledge and practices in both climate action and health strategies are fundamental for creating interventions that are both culturally appropriate and effective.”

    Furthermore, it recognizes that “these initiatives ensure that climate and health solutions are tailored to the specific needs and realities of those most impacted by climate change but also grounded in their lived realities.”

    What framework for collaboration?

    The path forward requires what the report describes as “cooperation across sectors, stakeholders and rights-holders – governmental institutions, local authorities, local leaders including religious authorities and traditional medicine practitioners, NGOs, businesses, the health community, Indigenous Peoples as well as local communities.”

    Our experience with Teach to Reach demonstrates how such cooperation can be facilitated at scale through digital platforms that enable peer learning and knowledge sharing. Key elements include:

    • a structured yet flexible framework for sharing experiences and insights;
    • direct connections between health workers at all levels of the system;
    • rapid feedback loops between local implementation and broader learning;
    • support for health workers to document and share their innovations; and
    • mechanisms to validate and spread effective local solutions.

    WHO’s recognition that health workers have “a moral, professional and public responsibility to protect and promote health, which includes advocating for climate action, leveraging prevention for climate mitigation and cost savings, and safeguarding healthy environments” sets a clear mandate.

    This WHO report highlights the need for new ways of supporting community-led learning and action to:

    1. support the rapid sharing of local solutions;
    2. build health worker capacity through peer learning;
    3. connect communities facing similar challenges; and
    4. enable health workers to lead change in their communities

    Reference

    Neira, M. et al. (2024) COP 29 Special Report on Climate Change and Health: Health is the Argument for Climate Action. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization.

    Image: The Geneva Learning Foundation Collection © 2024

  • Don’t cancel or postpone your conference, workshop, or training – go digital

    Don’t cancel or postpone your conference, workshop, or training – go digital

    How we respond to the threat of a disaster is critical.

    Organizations planning physical-world events have a choice:

    • You can cancel or postpone your event OR
    • You can go digital.

    Why not go digital?

    • You think it cannot be done.
    • You do not know how to do it.
    • You believe the experience will be inferior.

    It can be done. You can learn. You are likely to be surprised by how much you can achieve.

    The Geneva Learning Foundation is inviting conference and other event organizers to a Special Event in which we will share how you can rapidly move or ‘pivot’ your events online.

    What is The Geneva Learning Foundation?

    The Geneva Learning Foundation is a Swiss non-profit with the mission to develop trial, and scale up new ways to lead change to tackle the challenges that threaten our societies.

    We are purely digital. This means all of our operations and activities take place online.

    • Nearly every day, we organize and facilitate one or more digital events that convene hundreds or thousands of participants from all over the world.
    • We want to help other organizations by sharing our experience and know-how.

    Why are we doing this?

    • We believe that the digital transformation can strengthen the resilience of our societies.
    • Cancelling or postponing a conference weakens ongoing work that may be significant or important.

    Why attend this Special Event?

    If you are planning a conference:

    • During this Special Event, we will share the critical success factors for digital events. You are likely to be surprised by what we have found makes the greatest difference.
    • Attendees will receive an invitation to join our #DigitalConference short course, in which you actually build a practical plan you can use to go digital.

    If you are an event organizer, we know you may be already facing severe consequences.

    • If you have experience in providing services to design and run digital events, we invite you to share your services with participants.
    • If you have been primarily focused on physical-world events, we invite you to share how you are adapting.

    Here is a case study.

    We just organized a conference that was attended by more than 1,700 participants from 95 countries, including those hardest hit by COVID-19.

    • This conference ran in English 3-13 March and in French 16-30 March.
    • World-class presenters shared their expertise with practitioners.
    • Dialogue was constant – 24 hours a day, given participants spread across time zones.

    We were awed by the number and diversity of participants and the quality of their contributions in this Pre-Course Conference.

    How do we compare digital and physical? It is comparable?

    In the past, our partner had organized three successive face-to-face events in Barcelona and Dar Es Salaam.

    • Each event was attended by around 80 people.
    • Each event was well-planned and executed.
    • Each time, 80 people went back to their countries with new knowledge and relationships.

    After the third time, our partner was ready to go digital.

    Previous conferences were limited to around 80 participants.

    • They required everyone to stop their work in order to travel.
    • This is the hidden opportunity cost of face-to-face conferences.
    • It often adds up to far more than the actual expenditure on the event itself.

    What about the intangible serendipity of a conference?

    We know the real value of a physical event resides in the impromptu meetings of minds and bodies on the conference floor.

    • Sharing a drink or a meal provides the occasion to establish or strengthen informal relationships.
    • Yes, there are dozens of digital tools that can match individuals and organizations, schedule ad hoc meets, and stir idea generation and serendipity.
    • Yet, it is undeniable that some aspects – and the ones that matter – are difficult to replicate.

    Conversely, you may discover new ways of doing new things in a digital conference that can accelerate and multiply serendipity.

    If you cancel or postpone, you will get nothing.

    Is it expensive?

    • No. You can make an awesome event digital using only free tools.
    • You can also hire people and providers with the right combination of tools, talent, and vision.
    • The secret sauce is in the know-how required: not to use the tools, but to figure out how to both replicate and augment the experience you wish to create.

    This is where organizations and service providers with experience can help.

    Is it difficult or time-consuming?

    No. If you already have an event scheduled, there is a simple method to:

    • Identify what is the value and significance provided by the event – including the intangible, serendipitous bits
    • Think through how to recreate and augment this value
    • Convert everything you planned into a digital format

  • Who are we and why are we talking?

    Who are we and why are we talking?

    As learning leaders, we share a personal passion and commitment to solving wicked problems. We recognize that no one organization can solve these problems alone. We use our talent to advocate for new ways of doing new things, both inside and outside our structures. We see continual learning as the key to preparedness in a hyper-connected VUCA world. We believe that creative, collaborative, and networked business models are needed for both communities (“resilience”) and businesses (“sustainability”) that serve them (including humanitarian organizations) to survive and grow. The small farmer or grocery store perspective is the community-based perspective. Sustainability is the business. The point of our continued conversation is to determine how we can move to collaboration and action.

    Photo: Boats on the sea shore (Despite straight lines/Flickr)