Event sponsored by:
Nicholas Institute for Energy, Environment and Sustainability
Duke-Margolis Institute for Health Policy
School of Medicine (SOM)
Contact:
None
Register for the fourth installment in the Duke Climate Collaboration Symposia series: Health Reform and Climate Change: Policy Reforms to Improve Health System Sustainability and Population Health. This is a hybrid event; all panel sessions will be livestreamed.
Climate change has many implications for health and health care. Climate change exacerbates many existing health vulnerabilities and presents new ones, and health systems need to evolve to keep pace. Meanwhile, as one of the largest and fastest-growing sectors of the economy, health care has been a major contributor to greenhouse gas emissions. Addressing these trends is especially daunting given pressures on health care systems to reduce costs, improve access to care, and address population health challenges such as chronic disease and aging.
Join us in-person or virtually to explore potential health policy reforms to these pressing challenges. On October 1, 2025, expert speakers will convene for a Duke Climate Collaboration Symposium co-hosted by the Duke-Margolis Institute for Health Policy and the Duke University School of Medicine. The symposium will focus on opportunities for health care to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions and implement reforms to mitigate the health impacts of climate change while simultaneously addressing the challenges of affordability, access, and population health. This is a hybrid event; all panel sessions will be livestreamed.
The event will begin with a keynote address from Bill Frist (The Nature Conservancy and Former Senate Majority Leader). Throughout the day, interdisciplinary experts will engage with evidence related to innovative, complementary strategies that can both address climate change burdens and improve health outcomes. Experts will collaboratively examine and imagine how policy reform can yield diverse "co-benefits": health system sustainability, healthier patients and communities, greater operational efficiency, and a more resilient health care ecosystem. The symposium will conclude with a fireside chat between Bill Frist, Victor Dzau (National Academy of Medicine), and Mark McClellan (Duke-Margolis Institute for Health Policy). Learn more and register.