Assessing the Human Health Benefits of Climate Mitigation, Pollution Prevention, and Biodiversity Preservation.

IF 2.6 4区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Annals of Global Health Pub Date : 2024-01-05 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.5334/aogh.4161
Philip J Landrigan, Michael Britt, Samantha Fisher, Amelia Holmes, Manasi Kumar, Jenna Mu, Isabella Rizzo, Anna Sather, Aroub Yousuf, Pushpam Kumar
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Since the Industrial Revolution, humanity has amassed great wealth and achieved unprecedented material prosperity. These advances have come, however, at great cost to the planet. They are guided by an economic model that focuses almost exclusively on short-term gain, while ignoring natural capital and human capital. They have relied on the combustion of vast quantities of fossil fuels, massive consumption of the earth's resources, and production and environmental release of enormous quantities of chemicals, pesticides, fertilizers, and plastics. They have caused climate change, pollution, and biodiversity loss, the "Triple Planetary Crisis". They are responsible for more than 9 million premature deaths per year and for widespread disease - impacts that fall disproportionately upon the poor and the vulnerable.

Goals: To map the human health impacts of climate change, pollution, and biodiversity loss. To outline a framework for assessing the health benefits of interventions against these threats.

Findings: Actions taken by national governments and international agencies to mitigate climate change, pollution, and biodiversity loss can improve health, prevent disease, save lives, and enhance human well-being. Yet assessment of health benefits is largely absent from evaluations of environmental remediation programs. This represents a lost opportunity to quantify the full benefits of environmental remediation and to educate policy makers and the public.

Recommendations: We recommend that national governments and international agencies implementing interventions against climate change, pollution, and biodiversity loss develop metrics and strategies for quantifying the health benefits of these interventions. We recommend that they deploy these tools in parallel with assessments of ecologic and economic benefits. Health metrics developed by the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study may provide a useful starting point.Incorporation of health metrics into assessments of environmental restoration will require building transdisciplinary collaborations. Environmental scientists and engineers will need to work with health scientists to establish evaluation systems that link environmental and economic data with health data. Such systems will assist international agencies as well as national and local governments in prioritizing environmental interventions.

评估气候减缓、污染预防和生物多样性保护对人类健康的益处。
背景:自工业革命以来,人类积累了大量财富,实现了前所未有的物质繁荣。然而,这些进步是以地球付出巨大代价为代价的。它们所遵循的经济模式几乎只注重短期收益,却忽视了自然资本和人力资本。它们依赖于大量化石燃料的燃烧、地球资源的大量消耗,以及大量化学品、杀虫剂、化肥和塑料的生产和环境排放。它们造成了气候变化、污染和生物多样性丧失,即 "三重地球危机"。它们每年造成 900 多万人过早死亡,并导致疾病泛滥--穷人和弱势群体受到的影响尤为严重:绘制气候变化、污染和生物多样性丧失对人类健康影响的地图。概述评估针对这些威胁的干预措施的健康益处的框架:各国政府和国际机构为减缓气候变化、污染和生物多样性丧失而采取的行动可以改善健康、预防疾病、挽救生命并提高人类福祉。然而,在对环境修复计划进行评估时,基本上没有对健康效益进行评估。这意味着我们失去了量化环境修复的全部益处以及教育政策制定者和公众的机会:我们建议各国政府和国际机构在实施应对气候变化、污染和生物多样性丧失的干预措施时,制定量化这些干预措施的健康益处的指标和策略。我们建议他们在评估生态和经济效益的同时部署这些工具。全球疾病负担(GBD)研究制定的健康指标可以提供一个有用的起点。将健康指标纳入环境恢复评估需要建立跨学科合作。环境科学家和工程师需要与健康科学家合作建立评估系统,将环境和经济数据与健康数据联系起来。这些系统将帮助国际机构以及国家和地方政府确定环境干预措施的优先次序。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Annals of Global Health
Annals of Global Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.40%
发文量
95
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: ANNALS OF GLOBAL HEALTH is a peer-reviewed, open access journal focused on global health. The journal’s mission is to advance and disseminate knowledge of global health. Its goals are improve the health and well-being of all people, advance health equity and promote wise stewardship of the earth’s environment. The journal is published by the Boston College Global Public Health Program. It was founded in 1934 by the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai as the Mount Sinai Journal of Medicine. It is a partner journal of the Consortium of Universities for Global Health.
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