# Prioritizing evidence for action from the 2024 small island developing states report of the Lancet Countdown on health and climate change

**Authors:** Stephanie Y Parker, Kimalie F Parchment, Maria Walawender, Georgiana Gordon-Strachan

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.joclim.2025.100482 · 2025-07-23

## TL;DR

This paper identifies key climate and health indicators for small island nations to guide urgent climate action and improve resilience.

## Contribution

A novel method ranks health and climate indicators for regional decision-making in small island developing states.

## Key findings

- Six indicators showed successful adaptation in small islands, while 14 showed negative outcomes compared to global benchmarks.
- Heat impact on productivity and food security is a critical area needing urgent action in small islands.
- Data limitations hinder climate resilience, highlighting the need for increased research and investment in SIDS.

## Abstract

•Data & resource constraints can hinder climate resilience in small islands.•Climate & health indicator evidence can be used for targeted climate action.•The method in this study ranks evidence by importance for regional decision-making.•Urgent action is needed for heat impact on SIDS’ productivity & food security.•Investment is needed to increase health and climate research on SIDS.

Data & resource constraints can hinder climate resilience in small islands.

Climate & health indicator evidence can be used for targeted climate action.

The method in this study ranks evidence by importance for regional decision-making.

Urgent action is needed for heat impact on SIDS’ productivity & food security.

Investment is needed to increase health and climate research on SIDS.

Small island developing states (SIDS) are vulnerable to the ill-health effects associated with unabated atmospheric warming driven by larger, more developed countries. Hence, the health-centered focus of the Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change has immense value for SIDS.

Given resource constraints and data limitations across the SIDS region, the inaugural 2024 SIDS report of the Lancet Countdown required a method of singling out the most regionally relevant indicators from 47 Lancet Countdown global indicators. A two-stage semi-qualitative method was designed for this purpose.

The evaluation stage involved identifying two indicator sets from stakeholder consultation (n = 32) and a multi-criteria assessment (n = 11). Using both sets of indicators, only 11 met the criteria of being regionally representative and relevant, further confirming data limitations. To adjust for this challenge, 14 indicators were added to the final list based on relevance. Therefore, 25 Lancet Countdown indicators were selected for the 2024 SIDS report of the Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change. To further prioritize the wide range of evidence from these indicators, a qualitative multiplication matrix was used to define relationships between regional data coverage and differences from global benchmarks. Six indicators marked successes in adaptation, and 14 evidenced negative implications compared to global benchmarks.

The impact of heat on physical activity, food security, and economic development was of critical regional importance, as was the need for more research. The study identified critical areas where urgent climate action is needed, emphasizing the need for increased research and data collection in SIDS.

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12851233/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12851233