Yves here. While the Oregon Medicaid funding of equipment to help participants get through heat waves is positive from a public health perspective and as the article below explains, even pays of in terms of reducing costs to health insurers.

However, this program also illustrates how climate change is exacerbating environmental pressures. More cooling devices = making and delivering more stuff, as in resource use, including energy. I remember as a kid living in western Oregon in the 1960s for a few years that the summers were always temperate. Not only did we not have air conditioning in company houses built to be pretty plush by the standards of the day, but we didn’t even have a fan.

I must confess to not knowing what conditions are like in the less densely populated part of the state east of the Cascade mountains. The winters are harsher and I assume the summers were a lot hotter too. But hot enough for air con to be routine?

By Samantha Young, senior KFF Health News correspondent, who was rreviously a reporter for The Associated Press and the Stephens Media Group. Originally published at KFF Health News

Oregon is shipping air conditioners, air purifiers, and power banks to some of its most vulnerable residents, a first-in-the-nation experiment to use Medicaid money to prevent the potentially deadly health effects of extreme heat, wildfire smoke, and other climate-related disasters.

This entry was posted in Environment, Global warming, Guest Post, Health care, Regulations and regulators on by Yves Smith.