The Guardian (Nigeria)

Addressing ‘ catastroph­ic harm to health’ from climate change

- Compiled by Chukwuma Muanya

OVER 200 health journals across the world have come together to simultaneo­usly publish an editorial calling on world leaders to take emergency action to limit global temperatur­e increases, halt the destructio­n of nature, and protect health.

While recent targets to reduce emissions and conserve biodiversi­ty are welcome, they are not enough and are yet to be matched with credible short and longer term plans, it warns.

The editorial is published in leading titles from every continent including The BMJ, The Lancet, the New England Journal of Medicine, the East African Medical Journal, the Chinese Science Bulletin, the National Medical Journal of India, the Medical Journal of Australia, and 50 BMJ specialist journals including BMJ Global Health and Thorax.

Never have so many journals come together to make the same statement, reflecting the severity of the climate change emergency now facing the world.

The editorial is being published ahead of the United Nations ( UN) General Assembly next week, one of the last internatio­nal meet

ings taking place before the ( COP26) climate conference in Glasgow, United Kingdom ( UK) in November. This is a crucial moment to urge all countries to deliver enhanced and ambitious climate plans to honour the goals of the Paris Agreement, the internatio­nal treaty on climate change adopted by 195 countries in 2015.

For decades, health profession­als and health journals have been warning of the severe and growing impacts on health from climate change and the destructio­n of nature.

The impact on health and survival of extreme temperatur­es, destructiv­e weather events, and the widespread degradatio­n of essential ecosystems are just some of the impacts that we are seeing more of due to a changing climate.

They disproport­ionately affect the most vulnerable, including children and the elderly, ethnic minorities, poorer communitie­s and those with underlying health conditions.

The editorial urges government­s to intervene to transform societies and economies, for example, by supporting the redesign of transport systems, cities, production and distributi­on of food, markets for financial investment­s, and health systems.

Substantia­l investment will be needed, but this will have huge positive health and economic benefits, including high quality jobs, reduced air pollution, increased physical activity, and improved housing and diet, explain the authors.

Crucially, cooperatio­n hinges on wealthy nations doing more, they say. In particular, countries that have disproport­ionately created the environmen­tal crisis must do more to support low and middle income countries to build cleaner, healthier, and more resilient societies.

“As health profession­als, we must do all we can to aid the transition to a sustainabl­e, fairer, resilient, and healthier world,” they write. “We, as editors of health journals, call for government­s and other leaders to act, marking 2021 as the year that the world finally changes course.”

Editor- in- Chief of The BMJ, and one of the co- authors of the editorial, Dr. Fiona Godlee, said: “Health profession­als have been on the frontline of the COVID- 19 crisis and they are united in warning that going above 1.5C and allowing the continued destructio­n of nature will bring the next, far deadlier crisis. Wealthier nations must act faster and do more to support those countries already suffering under higher temperatur­es. 2021 has to be the year the world changes course — our health depends on it.”

Editor- in- Chief of BMJ Global Health, Seye Abimbola, said: “What we must do to tackle pandemics, health inequities, and climate change is the same - global solidarity and action that recognise that, within and across nations our destinies are inextricab­ly linked, just as human health is inextricab­ly linked to the health of the planet.”

Joint Editor- in- Chief of Thorax, Prof. Alan Smyth, said: “Global warming affects the future of our planet and right now it is affecting the lung health of all of its inhabitant­s across all ages, from young to old. This editorial is a call to world leaders at COP26 to take immediate and proportion­ate action to limit the rise in global temperatur­es.”

 ??  ?? CREDIT: https:// www. cdc. gov/ climateand­health/ effects/ default. htm
CREDIT: https:// www. cdc. gov/ climateand­health/ effects/ default. htm

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