Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

4 ways climate change and population growth threaten public health

- By Maureen Lichtveld

There are questions that worry me profoundly as a population- and environmen­tal-health scientist.

Will we have enough food for a growing global population? How will we take care of more people in the next pandemic? What will heat do to millions with hypertensi­on? Will countries wage water wars because of increasing droughts?

These risks all have three things in common: health, climate change and a growing population that the United Nations said reached 8 billion people around Tuesday — double the population of just 48 years ago.

In my 40-year career, first working in the Amazon rainforest and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and then in academia, I have encountere­d many public health threats, but none so intransige­nt and pervasive as climate change.

Of the multitude of climate-related adverse health effects, the following four represent the greatest public health concerns for a growing population.

Infectious diseases

Researcher­s have found that over half of all human infectious diseases can be worsened by climate change.

Flooding, for example, can affect water quality and the habitats where dangerous bacteria and vectors like mosquitoes can breed and transmit infectious­diseases to people.

Dengue, a painful mosquitobo­rne viral disease that sickens about 100 million people a year, becomes more common in warm, wet environmen­ts. Its R0, or basic reproducti­on number — a gauge of how quickly it spreads — increased

by about 12% from the 1950s to the average in 2012-2021, according to the 2022 Lancet Countdown

report.

Malaria’s season expanded by 31% in highland areas of Latin

America and nearly 14% in Africa’s highlands as temperatur­es rose over the same period.

Flooding can also spread waterborne organisms that cause hepatitis and diarrheal diseases, such as cholera, particular­ly when large numbers of people are displaced by disasters and living in areas with poor water quality for drinking or washing.

Droughts, too, can degrade drinking water quality. As a result, more rodent population­s enter into human communitie­s in search of food, increasing the potential to spread hantavirus.

Extreme heat

Another serious health risk is rising temperatur­es.

Excessive heat can exacerbate existing health problems, such as

ascardiova­scular and respirator­y diseases. And when heat stress becomes heat stroke, it can damage the heart,brain and kidneys and become lethal.

Today, about 30% of the global population is exposed to potentiall­y deadly heat stress each year. The Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change estimates that percentage will rise to at least 48% and as high as 76% by the end of this century.

Where climate change affects human health. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

In addition to lives lost, heat exposure was projected to have resulted in 470 billion potential work hours lost globally in 2021, with associated income losses totaling up to US$669 billion. As population­s grow and heat rises, more people will be relying on air conditioni­ng powered by fossil fuels, which further contribute­s to climate change.

Food and water security

Heat also affects food and water security for a growing population.

The Lancet review found that high temperatur­es in 2021 shortened the growing season by about 9.3 days on average for corn, or maize, and six days for wheat compared with the 1981-2020 average. Warming oceans, meanwhile, can kill shellfish and shift fisheries that coastalcom­munities rely on. Heat waves in 2020 alone resulted in 98 million more people facing food insecurity compared with the 1981-2010 average.

Rising temperatur­es also affect fresh water supplies through evaporatio­n and by shrinking mountain glaciers and snowpack that historical­ly have kept water flowingthr­ough the summer months.

Water scarcity and drought have the potential to displace almost 700 million people by 2030, according to U.N. estimates. Combined with population growth and growing energy needs, they can also fuel geopolitic­al conflicts as countries face food shortages and compete for water.

Poor air quality

Air pollution can be exacerbate­d by the drivers of climate change. Hot weather and the same fossil fuel gases warming the planet contribute to ground-level ozone, a key component of smog. That can exacerbate allergies, asthma and other respirator­y problems, as well as cardiovasc­ular disease.

Wildfires fueled by hot, dry landscapes add to the air pollution health risk. Wildfire smoke is laden with tiny particles that can travel deep into the lungs, causing heart and respirator­y problems.

What can we do?

Many groups and medical experts are working to counter this cascade of negative climate consequenc­es on human health.

The U.S. National Academy of Medicine has embarked on an ambitious grand challenge in climate change, human health, and equity to ramp up research. At many academic institutio­ns, including the University of Pittsburgh’s School of Public Health, where I am dean, climate and health are being embedded in research, teaching and service.

Addressing the health burden on low- and middleinco­me countries is pivotal. Often, the most vulnerable people in these countries face the greatest harms from climate change without having the resources to protect their health and environmen­t. Population growth can deepen these iniquities.

Adaptation assessment­s can help high-risk countries prepare for the effects of climate change. Developmen­t groups are also leading projects to expand the cultivatio­n of crops that can thrive in dry conditions. The Pan American Health Organizati­on, which focuses on the Caribbean, is an example of how countries are working to reduce communicab­le diseases and advance regional capacity to counter the impact of climate change.

Ultimately, reducing the health risks will require reducing the greenhouse gas emissions that are driving climate change.

Countries worldwide committed in 1992 to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Thirty years later, global emissions are only beginning to flatten, and communitie­s around the world are increasing­ly suffering extreme heat waves and devastatin­g floods and droughts.

The U.N. Climate Change Conference underway in November 2022 — which, in my view,isn’t focusing enough on health — can help bring attention to key climate impacts that harm health. As U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres noted: While we celebrate our advances, “at the same time, it is a reminder of our shared responsibi­lity to care for our planet and a moment to reflect on where we still fall short of our commitment­sto one another.”

 ?? Shuttersto­ck ?? Reaching the population milestone of 8 billion people, paired with climate change, raises questions for public health.
Shuttersto­ck Reaching the population milestone of 8 billion people, paired with climate change, raises questions for public health.
 ?? Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ??
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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