Southwest Center on Resilience for Climate Change and Health (SCORCH) - PROJECT ABSTRACT – Component: Overall
Arid lands are home to one in three people, totaling a population of more than 2 billion spanning the globe. Arid
land communities are facing multiple climate change-exacerbated threats impacting health including extreme
heat events, wildfires, dust storms, biodiversity loss, emerging pathogens, poor air quality, and drought. The
Southwest Center on Resilience for Climate Change and Health (SCORCH) brings together
transdisciplinary research groups to conduct team-science projects addressing the health needs of arid lands
communities adapting to climate change. The Center's overarching mission is to improve health equity across
the lifespan by enhancing community partnerships and supporting adaptation efforts by Indigenous, Latinx,
low-resource urban, and rural communities in the Southwestern United States and globally. Based at the
University of Arizona (UArizona), home of internationally recognized climate science and adaptation
researchers and Centers, SCORCH will serve as a foundation for expanding UArizona campus initiatives
aiming to increase health research at the intersection of climate change science. The three-year planning
phase will be used to identify researchers whose expertise align with climate change and health across
UArizona and the region, build transdisciplinary teams, identify priority research areas for community
adaptation planning, and implement two research projects to develop our initial Research Focus Group (RFG)
themes. Our initial three RFGs build on the expertise of the current SCORCH team members and are
purposefully broad to encompass evolving research priorities. These three themes include: 1) Health impacts
of extreme weather events; 2) Forecasting and early warning of climate change health outcomes; and 3)
Adaptive responses in the built environment. Research Project 1 aligns with RFG 2 and 3, to develop an
assessment tool that can predict potential health outcomes of greenspace designs. Research Project 2 aligns
with RFG 1 to examine the role of maternal exposure to extreme heat and long-term child health outcomes.
Through community engaged activities founded on respect and trust, led by the Community Engagement Core,
and novel data visualization services, led by the Integrated Data Visualization Core, we will deepen existing
and develop new partnerships with academic and community entities with diverse lived experiences and
knowledge frameworks. The geographic location of SCORCH in the Southwestern United States provides
unique research opportunities to support adaptation and resilience efforts of Indigenous, Latinx, low-resource
urban, and rural communities in the region as well as addressing the unique circumstances found in borderland
areas. The potential international reach of SCORCH enables high-impact climate change and health initiatives
that will translate globally.