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Building Resilient Communities for a Healthier Future For All

We tackle critical challenges at the intersection of extreme weather hazards and health to create sustainable and just communities. Our research informs policymakers on the health impacts of extreme heat, wildfire smoke, and other climate hazards, while identifying adaptation strategies that protect the most vulnerable. By integrating science with community engagement, we ensure that community health remain at the center of climate solutions.

About the Methods Development Research Core (MDRC)

The MDRC is dedicated to advancing climate and health research by addressing critical modeling and data gaps. Our work supports climate action policies that promote fair access to health, ensuring that adaptation strategies are effective and inclusive.

Why It Matters

Climate hazards are increasing—not just individually, but also as compound events, occurring concurrently or consecutively. These complex interactions challenge our ability to adapt, putting vulnerable communities at higher risk.

Impact & Policy Integration

By improving how we model climate-health interactions, MDRC helps policymakers make evidence-based decisions that:
🌍 Enhance climate resilience
⚡ Strengthen early adaptation efforts
🏥 Support health access in vulnerable populations

To protect human health in the changing climate, research is urgently needed to understand adaptation and mitigation efforts impact on public health.

Results will inform future action-oriented policies, programs, and targeted interventions to mitigate extreme weather health effects, especially among the most vulnerable. This research project will contribute to the USC CLIMA Center’s capacity building efforts to engage a scientifically research team with varied expertise in conducting and developing approaches for impactful transdisciplinary climate health research.

Extreme weather hazards are rapidly intensifying, and while mitigating these is a critical goal, there is an urgent need to reduce vulnerability to its cardiovascular health (CVH) impacts. Of the rapidly emerging CC threats, heat stress and wildfire (WF) smoke are strongly linked to adverse CVH outcomes, yet little is known about how weather hazards may influence CVH profiles across the age spectrum, particularly in youth when adaptation strategies to increase resilience may be most impactful on long term health.

By understanding how climate stressors shape CVH and identifying early biomarkers of biological resilience, this research provides actionable insights for:
🌱 Targeted, scalable risk screenings for individuals most vulnerable to climate stress
🏙️ Community-level adaptation strategies to improve resilience and reduce CVH impacts
📢 Informing policies and interventions that address extreme weather patterns and harzards