Standards for Official Statistics on Climate-Health Interactions (SOSCHI): Healthcare systems and infrastructure - a qualitative approach: Methodology
Authors/Creators
- 1. Regional Institute of Population Studies, University of Ghana
- 2. The Science and Technology Policy Research Institute, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research
- 3. Regional Institute for Population Studies, University of Ghana
- 4. Research and Development Division, Ghana Health Service
- 5. Department of Environment and Public Health, University of Environment and Sustainable Development
Description
Healthcare systems include a broad range of activities from public health initiatives to services, covering both private and public sectors. Globally, healthcare systems are under significant pressure which are further compounded by the effects of climate change. These can be direct impacts to infrastructure as well as disruption to medical supply and service delivery. The ability of facilities to function, particularly in vulnerable regions, during extreme conditions such as flooding, heatwaves and storms determines the effectiveness of these systems in mitigating the impacts of climate change on public health. This topic area follows a different approach to the wider framework, aiming to use qualitative methods to assess the impact on health workforce, infrastructure and technology as well as service delivery.
Methods for this topic take a different approach to the other SOSCHI topic areas, being based on development of a qualitative methodology and the resulting outputs of a pretest case study in Ghana.
Files
Healthcare_systems_Alpha_Version_28_11_2025.pdf
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Additional details
Related works
- Is supplement to
- Working paper: 10.5281/zenodo.14883129 (DOI)