Avatar for Health Professionals for a Healthy ClimateBy Health Professionals for a Healthy Climate

2 min. read  


 

HPHC and ABH's table materials. Seed packets and a sign with the tagline: "Like a garden, democracy needs tending" with ABH and HPHC's logos.

ABH and HPHC’s tabling materials featuring the tagline: “Like a garden, democracy needs tending,” along with a variety of flower and vegetable seed packets.

 

On June 9-10, Health Professionals for a Healthy Climate (HPHC) and Advocates for Better Health (ABH) connected with a variety of rural health stakeholders at the 2025 Minnesota Rural Health conference in Duluth, which is one of the largest state rural health conferences in the country.

HPHC and ABH co-tabled at the conference with a timely goal — to raise awareness about the intersections between democracy, health, climate change, and rural communities. “Like a garden, democracy needs tending,” was the tagline proudly displayed at ABH and HPHC’s table along with free flower and vegetable seed packets offered just in time for gardening season.

With Duluth’s air visibly hazy from lingering wildfire smoke and the conference immediately following a week of Minnesota’s worst air quality report ever recorded, there was ample curiosity about HPHC’s wildfire smoke and health posters displayed at the table. Many conference-goers shared they worried about visibly poor air quality in the past month, which served as a conversation starter for asking deeper questions about the impacts of climate change on public health in rural communities, and what steps we can begin to take together.

 

ABH and HPHC's tabling poster with sticky notes from conference attendees. The sign has the tagline: What's growing in your community with let's plant something new. Share your thoughts, take a seed packet, and let's grow a healthier democracy together.

Interactive signage asking conference attendees what’s on their minds when it comes to health and democracy in their communities.

Conference attendees also shared their thoughts and future hopes for health and democracy. When asked the question: “What’s on your mind when it comes to health and democracy in your community?” responses included frustration around the current brokenness of the U.S. healthcare system, hope in the role of unions, and a deep desire for rural communities to be fully engaged and heard in decision-making.

The tabling conversations provided an opportunity to connect with new faces from hundreds of rural Minnesota communities, deepened existing Duluth area connections, and reinforced HPHC and ABH’s shared commitment to working towards a healthy, equitable, and climate-resilient future for all Minnesotans across the state.

 

The view from a forested area near the shores of Gichigami, or Lake Superior. Gichigami is the Ojibwe and original name of Lake Superior.

HPHC staff reveled in the post-conference views from a forested area near the shores of Gichigami, the original and Ojibwe name of Lake Superior.


 

Did you say hello at the Minnesota Rural Health Association conference? We’d love to continue hearing more about you and your interests!

Schedule a short 1:1 conversation with us here.