Direct Relief Foundation

04/22/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/22/2026 14:48

Protecting Health in a Changing Climate

The inextricable link between climate and health has perhaps never been more evident.

Record-setting hurricanes. Wildfire seasons that now stretch nearly year-round. Extreme heat, flooding, and instability don't just disrupt communities-they disrupt the health systems people rely on.

This raises a critical question: What does it take to protect health when the conditions around healthcare are becoming less predictable?

One part of the answer is resilient energy. The ability to deliver medical care consistently and safely depends on it.

Invisible Until It Fails

Modern healthcare relies on electricity. It powers cold chain infrastructure that keeps vaccines and other medications at the right temperature. It runs essential medical equipment. It enables digital health records and communications. Electricity is foundational to frontline care.

When the power goes out, care doesn't simply pause. It breaks.

For communities already facing barriers to healthcare in the U.S. and around the world, outages can mean delayed treatment, spoiled medications, and missed opportunities to save lives. As climate-driven disasters become more frequent and severe, these disruptions are no longer rare events. They're becoming the baseline.

I've seen the consequences firsthand, most recently in Hawaiʻi, where community clinics lost tens of thousands of dollars' worth of vaccines and medications during extended power outages caused by extreme weather. For nonprofit clinics, there is little margin for loss. Fewer resources mean fewer patients receive care.

That's why preparedness must begin long before a storm or wildfire strikes. This is where Direct Relief steps in, strengthening health systems so they can continue delivering care, even in crisis.

Local Clinics. Global Impact.

In the United States, Direct Relief has funded the design and installation of solar-plus-storage microgrid systems at community health centers, free and charitable clinics, and tribal health facilities serving approximately 2.3 million patients each year-many of whom face significant barriers to care even under normal circumstances.

In Northern California, Direct Relief fully funded a solar-and-battery microgrid at longtime partner Winters Healthcare, a federally qualified health center serving Yolo County. For the more than 4,500 patients who rely on the facility annually-many of them agricultural workers-losing power can mean losing access to medical, dental, behavioral health, and pharmacy services.

Globally, Direct Relief's resilient power projects now span 25 countries.

In southwestern Liberia, we supported a remote hospital with solar power and on-site medical oxygen-replacing unreliable diesel generators and enabling continuous care in a region without a stable electrical grid.

Across the Caribbean, we're partnering with the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States, or OECS, to help hospitals operate independently during and after disasters-from resilient energy systems to medical oxygen infrastructure.

These systems do more than keep the lights on. They create stability amid uncertainty.

This same understanding informed Direct Relief's investment in a resilient microgrid at our global distribution center, where millions of dollars' worth of lifesaving medications are stored securely and at the correct temperature every day.

All of this reinforces a fundamental truth: climate resilience is health resilience. Addressing this growing risk requires more than emergency response. It requires planning ahead.

This is the work we're committed to-on Earth Day and every day-helping healthcare providers prepare for today's climate realities and what lies ahead.

- Amy

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Direct Relief Foundation published this content on April 22, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on April 22, 2026 at 20:48 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]