Chicago Sun-Times

CLIMATE CHANG E’ S IMPACT ON HEALTH ALREADY HERE

- BYDOYLE RICE

Climate change is already having an extraordin­ary impact on human health worldwide — affecting the spread of infectious diseases, exposing millions to air pollution and heat waves and dramatical­ly reducing labor productivi­ty, according to a report released recently.

“The human symptoms of climate change are unequivoca­l and potentiall­y irreversib­le,” the report by the British medical journal The Lancet says, and the situation is so serious that significan­t gains by modern medicine and technology are being undercut.

“The delayed response to climate change over the past 25 years has jeopardize­d human life and livelihood­s,” the report says.

While most previous similar studies have covered the potential impact of climate change on future public health problems, the Lancet report goes a step further and illustrate­s how it is no longer a future threat but a present one.

The direct effects of climate change “result from rising temperatur­es and changes in the frequency and strength of storms, floods, droughts and heat waves— with physical and mental health consequenc­es,” it says.

For example, from 2000 to 2016, there has been a 46 percent increase in the number of weather- related disasters, the report notes.

Some of the findings of the Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change report:

Warming is exacerbati­ng the spread of Dengue fever, the world’s most rapidly expanding disease. In fact, two types of mosquitoes’ ability to spread Dengue globally have increased by 9.4 percent and 11.1 percent since the 1950s.

An additional 125 million people around the world were exposed to heat waves each year from 2000 to 2016 ( as compared with 1986- 2008), and a record 175 million people were exposed to heat waves in 2015.

Rising temperatur­es have led to a 5.3 percent fall in labor productivi­ty in the planet’s rural areas since 2000, with a dramatic drop of 2 from 2015 to 2016. In 2016, this effectivel­y took more than 920,000 people out of the global workforce.

Global exposure to dangerous levels of air pollution has increased by 11.2 percent since 1990.

Climate change is also worsening allergies in the United States. For example, Americans faced significan­tly longer exposure to ragweed pollen in 2016 compared with 1990.

Cutting the greenhouse gas emissions that lead to global warming is necessary for public health, the report says. Reductions have already begun to occur across major economies, driven by the expansion of renewable energy and the phasing out of coal.

Curbing emissions could have immediate, substantia­l health benefits, the report says, such as cleaner air in previously polluted cities.

“Preventing illnesses and injuries is more humane, more effective and more economical than treating people once they’ve become sick,” said Howard Frumkin of the University ofWashingt­on School of Public Health, one of the study authors.

“That’s plain common sense. What this report makes clear is that fighting climate change is disease prevention.”

Christiana Figueres, former executive secretary of the United Nations’ Framework Convention on Climate Change, said “the Lancet Countdown’s report lays bare the impact that climate change is having on our health today.

“It also shows that tackling climate change directly, unequivoca­lly and immediatel­y improves global health. It’s as simple as that.”

 ?? MARK SCHIEFELBE­IN/ AP ?? Awoman wears a face mask during a pollution alert in Beijing last week.
MARK SCHIEFELBE­IN/ AP Awoman wears a face mask during a pollution alert in Beijing last week.

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