Why Climate Change is Very Bad for Your Health
By Geordan Shannon
It is beyond doubt that our emissions contribute to climate
change. And climate change is making us sick.
Sea–level rises, changes to the severity of monsoon seasons
and rainfall, flooding, droughts and heatwaves are all predicted to have an
increasing impact on our health.
The World Health Organisation estimates that between 1970
and 2004, the environmental effects of climate change caused more than 140,000
deaths each year. And the direct financial cost of the damage it will have on
our health is estimated to come in at around US$2-4 billion in just over 15
years time.
Extreme weather events
We tend to think of large-scale weather events as “natural”
disasters, but the case is increasingly being made for a man-made cause and
effect for some of these. While it is difficult to attribute single events such
as Hurricane Katrina to climate change, climatologists have suggested a
possible role in contributing to the intensity of these kinds of events. And
flooding, droughts, heatwaves, and the spread of disease have all been linked
to climate change.
In the UK, adverse weather events already have a palpable
public presence. Only last year, a prolonged heat wave claimed around 650
excess deaths in England. And according to the authors of a report on the
disastrous 2003 heatwave that claimed 20,000 lives across Europe, it is “very
likely” that human influence has at least doubled the risk of another
particularly bad one happening again.
Julia Slingo, the Met Office’s chief scientist, said that
the evidence suggests climate change is likely to be a factor in the severe
weather than has caused torrential rain and flooding in the south of England
over the past two months. Since December there have been 130 severe flood
warnings (compared to nine in 2012) which not only poses an immediate physical
risk to people, but also threatens to undermine the country’s food security.
And such climatic events are occurring with increasing
severity and frequency across the globe.
Ecosystems
We don’t live in isolation from other ecosystems. From
large-scale weather events, through to the food we eat daily, right down to the
minute organisms colonising our skin and digestive systems, we live and breath
in co-dependency with our environment.
A change in the delicate balance of micro-organisms has the
potential to lead to disastrous effects. For example, microbial proliferation –
which is predicted in warmer temperatures driven by climate change – may lead
to more enteric infections (caused by viruses and bacteria that enter the body
through the gastrointestinal tract), such as salmonella food poisoning and
increased cholera outbreaks related to flooding and warmer coastal and
estuarine water.
Changes in temperature, humidity, rainfall, soil moisture
and sea-level rise, caused by climate change is also affecting the transmission
of dangerous insect-borne infectious diseases. These include malaria, dengue,
Japanese encephalitis, chikungunya and West Nile virus, lymphatic filariasis,
plague, tick-borne encephalitis, Lyme disease, rickettsioses, and
schistosomiasis.
Through climate change, the pattern of human interaction
will likely change and so will our interactions with disease-spreading insects,
especially mosquitoes. The World Health Organisation has also stressed the
impact of climate change on the reproductive, survival and bite rates of
insects, as well as their geographic spread.
Climate refugees
Perhaps the most disastrous effect of climate change on
human health is the emergence of large-scale forced migration from the loss of
local livelihoods and weather events – something that is recognised by the
United Nations High Commission on Human Rights. Sea-level rise, decreased crop
yield, and extreme weather events will force many people from their lands and
livelihoods, while refugees in vulnerable areas also face amplified conditions
such as fewer food supplies and more insect-borne diseases. And those who are
displaced put a significant health and economic burden on surrounding
communities.
The International Red Cross estimates that there are more
environmental refugees than political. Around 36m people were displaced by
natural disasters in 2009; a figure that is predicted to rise to more than 50m
by 2050. In one worst-case scenario, as many as 200m people could become
environmental refugees.
Not a level playing field
Climate change has emerged as a major driver of global
health inequalities. As J. Timmons Roberts, professor of Environmental Studies
and Sociology at Brown University, put it:
Global warming is
all about inequality, both in who will suffer most its effects and in who
created the problem in the first place.
Global climate change further polarises the haves and the
have-nots. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change predicts that climate
change will hit poor countries hardest. For example, the loss of healthy life
years in low-income African countries is predicted to be 500 times that in
Europe. The number of people in the poorest countries most vulnerable to hunger
is predicted by Oxfam International to increase by 20% in 2050. And many of the
major killers affecting developing countries, such as malaria, diarrhoeal
illnesses, malnutrition and dengue, are highly sensitive to climate change,
which would place a further disproportionate burden on poorer nations.
Most disturbingly, countries with weaker health
infrastructure – generally situated in the developing world – will be the least
able to cope with the effects of climate change. The world’s poorest regions
don’t yet have the technical, economic, or scientific capacity to prepare or
adapt.
Predictably, those most vulnerable to climate change are not
those who contribute most to it. China, the US, and the European Union combined
have contributed more than half the world’s total carbon dioxide emissions in
the last few centuries. By contrast, and unfairly, countries that contributed
the least carbon emissions (measured in per capita emissions of carbon dioxide)
include many African nations and small Pacific islands – exactly those
countries which will be least prepared and most affected by climate change.
Mitigating disaster
So what can and has been done by health professionals to
protect our globe and the people we care for from the deleterious effects of
climate change? Tony (AJ) McMichael, a professor of epidemiology at the
Australian National University, and colleagues suggest a number of strategies
to help populations adapt specifically to the health consequences of climate
change. These include public education, prevention programmes based around
vaccination, mosquito control and nutrition, more healthcare provision for
affected communities. Better forecasting of future risks and disease
surveillance will also go some way to helping.
Dialogue and momentum
But ultimately, the answer lies not just in cure but in
prevention. A recent report from Medact, a group of health professionals
dedicated to global issues around conflict, poverty and the environment,
recently outlined why the science of climate change matters to people working
in health:
Health
professionals are not climate scientists. But … global warming is already
having a significant negative impact on human health; it threatens to be an
overwhelming danger in the coming decades. For this reason, health
professionals … need some understanding of climate science as a basis for their
active and assertive engagement in policy debates about how we respond to
global warming.
Groups like this are integral to sustained focus on climate
change and generating political momentum. But beyond this, activism by everyone
must also play a role. The direction that our collective governments negotiate
is our responsibility. And we must continue to communicate our collective
concerns and make choices that are the best for the planet.
Four hats
As a scientist, I believe the overwhelming evidence that
climate change is real and is endangering the world; as a doctor, I see the
disproportionate impacts on the health of the world’s most vulnerable; as a
humanist, I believe in equality and advocating for those without a global
voice; and as an optimist, I believe that we can act coherently to mitigate the
worst effects of climate change.
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