Skip to content
  • Planetary health in pre-registration nursing curriculum: Our experience of participating in thePlanetary Health Report Card

    The 2025 World Health Organization ‘State of the world’s nursing’ report identifies the climate agenda
    as one of five emerging policy priorities for the nursing profession – a clear call to action on planetary
    health for nurses in every specialty, setting and location (World Health Organization, 2025) . A healthy
    planet is the foundation for healthy people, when the environment suffers, so do we.


    The need for nurses to consider planetary health in their practice has been increasingly recognised by
    peak nursing bodies (Australian College of Nursing, 2022; Council of Deans of Nursing and Midwifery,
    2024; International Council of Nurses, 2024) . The inclusion of planetary health in education and training
    for nurses is a vital part of this.


    Integrating planetary health education into pre-registration nursing programs aligns with the Standard 3
    of the Registered Nurse Accreditation Standards set by the Australian Nursing and Midwifery
    Accreditation Council; it requires nursing curricula to reflect contemporary practice and respond to
    emerging trends (Best et al., 2023) . However, research suggests that Australian nurses are
    underprepared to practice in this changing context, and that current Australian nursing curriculum has
    limited focus on critical planetary health content such as climate change science and sustainability.


    With an awareness of these issues, and a desire to include students in the conversation, Sydney Nursing
    School (SNS) Green Team initiated a Student Sustainability Champion Program involving participation in
    the Planetary Health Report Card (PHRC) initiative, a student-led, metric-based evaluation of planetary
    health content in health professional schools. Over several months three students from nursing and
    dietetics worked alongside academic mentors to explore five key domains, one of which was curriculum.


    We found important gaps in our nursing curriculum. Several units included discrete planetary health-
    related content such as climate change and equity, extreme weather events, and health system
    sustainability. However, these concepts were often not explicit in unit descriptions or core learning
    outcomes, limiting visibility, and threating their security within the curriculum. Most planetary health
    content was in social science units and there was limited content in clinical and biomedical units with
    notable gaps including the impacts of climate change on cardiorespiratory and reproductive health.


    First Nations pedagogy, an identified strength, is embedded as a stand-alone unit and scaffolded across
    the program. Traditional Indigenous Knowledge systems emphasise the interdependence between
    environment and health, drawing clear links to planetary health as essential for human health and
    wellbeing. Another highlight was interprofessional learning curricula which we found had adopted
    healthcare sustainability content, fostering crucial transdisciplinary learning.

    Our experience demonstrates the benefits of students and academics working in partnership through
    the PHRC initiative. As SNS prepares to adopt a new curriculum in 2026, this work provides important
    local evidence and a strong student voice to inform meaningful integration of planetary health content
    and ongoing evaluation.


    Future nurses must be equipped with not only clinical skills, but also with the knowledge, values, and
    leadership capabilities to respond to the complex challenges of climate change. Strengthening the
    curriculum through clear, outward-facing commitments to planetary health, appointment of formal
    planetary health leads, fostering transdisciplinary collaborations, and embedding student partnerships
    will ensure the cohesive, stable, and future-focused integration of planetary health into nursing
    education and training.


    You can access the full report and global summary documents at the Planetary Health Report Card
    Website: https://phreportcard.org/


    Acknowledgements:
    We acknowledge Dr Virginia Chan (Lecturer in Master of Nutrition and Dietetics at SNS) for her
    mentorship of students. We also acknowledge SNS Green Team Members and other SNS academics for
    their contributions and support of this work.


    Authors:
    Ms Darcie O’Connell Bachelor of Nursing (Advanced Studies) Student and Sustainability Champion, Co-
    Chair of the Western Pacific Region of the Nursing Now Challenge
    Ms Michelle Levy Bachelor of Nursing (Advanced Studies) Student and Sustainability Champion
    Ms Pritika Prahatheesan Master of Nutrition and Dietetics Student and Sustainability Champion
    Dr Gemma Saravanos Lecturer and SNS Green Team lead at Susan Wakil School of Nursing and
    Midwifery, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney

    References:
    Australian College of Nursing. (2022). Reimagining the role of nursing in emissions reduction.
    https://www.acn.edu.au/advocacy-policy/position-statement-reimagining-the-role-of-
    nursing-in-emissions-reduction

    Best, O., Tutticci, N., Heart, D., Lokmic-Tomkins, Z., & Ward, A. (2023). Rising to the climate
    challenge: integrating climate action in the undergraduate curriculum. Aust J Adv Nurs,
    40(3). https://doi.org/10.37464/2023.403.1266
    Council of Deans of Nursing and Midwifery. (2024). Position Statement: Planetary Health.
    https://irp.cdn-website.com/1636a90e/files/uploaded/Planetary_Health_Position_Statement_050824.pdf
    International Council of Nurses. (2024). Position Statement: Nurses, climate change and health.
    https://www.icn.ch/sites/default/files/2024-11/Nurses%20climate%20change%20health%20PS_EN.pdf

    World Health Organization. (2025). State of the world’s nursing.
    https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240110236