Climate, weather, and child health: quantifying health co-benefits

IF 5.8 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Shouro Dasgupta, Elizabeth J Z Robinson
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Abstract

Climate change affects human health negatively in a number of complex ways, and children are particularly vulnerable. Quantifying the negative impacts of climate change on health, and identifying locations where children are at greater risk, can aid evidence-based policy making. We combine high-resolution climatic data with a dataset on infant and child mortality, wasting, and stunting, from more than a hundred countries, to estimate the effects of both gradual and acute climate change, focusing on drought and heatwaves, to plausibly attribute changing child health outcomes to historical climate change. Our results suggest a non-linear relationship between temperature and children’s health, adverse effects of increases in acute events, and a strong regional heterogeneity in these impacts. Our findings also highlight the importance of poverty reduction. Greater wealth is associated with better child health outcomes, and partially mitigates the negative impacts of climate change on child health. Finally, using updated warming scenarios, our projections show that there are substantial health co-benefits from achieving low emissions scenarios.
气候、天气与儿童健康:量化健康的共同效益
气候变化以多种复杂的方式对人类健康产生负面影响,儿童尤其容易受到影响。量化气候变化对健康的负面影响,确定儿童面临更大风险的地点,有助于制定以证据为基础的政策。我们将百余个国家的高分辨率气候数据与婴幼儿死亡率、消瘦和发育迟缓数据集结合起来,估算渐变和急剧气候变化的影响,重点关注干旱和热浪,以便将不断变化的儿童健康结果合理地归因于历史气候变化。我们的研究结果表明,气温与儿童健康之间存在非线性关系,急性事件的增加会产生不利影响,而且这些影响具有很强的地区差异性。我们的研究结果还强调了减贫的重要性。更多的财富与更好的儿童健康结果相关,并能部分缓解气候变化对儿童健康的负面影响。最后,利用最新的气候变暖情景,我们的预测显示,实现低排放情景会带来巨大的健康共同利益。
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
Environmental Research Letters
Environmental Research Letters 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
11.90
自引率
4.50%
发文量
763
审稿时长
4.3 months
期刊介绍: Environmental Research Letters (ERL) is a high-impact, open-access journal intended to be the meeting place of the research and policy communities concerned with environmental change and management. The journal''s coverage reflects the increasingly interdisciplinary nature of environmental science, recognizing the wide-ranging contributions to the development of methods, tools and evaluation strategies relevant to the field. Submissions from across all components of the Earth system, i.e. land, atmosphere, cryosphere, biosphere and hydrosphere, and exchanges between these components are welcome.
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