Climate Cognition Crisis: Urgent Call to Address Air Pollution and Extreme Heat Impacts in Learning Environments of Children in South and Southeast Asia.

IF 1.5 Q4 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences Pub Date : 2025-10-01 Epub Date: 2025-10-31 DOI:10.21315/mjms-08-2025-s02
Pooja Swami Sahni, Surat Dewan, Manya Sachdeva, Nayomi Ranathunga, Widad Fadhullah, Jafri Malin Abdullah, Tusar Roy, Bidhan Pal, Shoukat Baloch, Bikash Adhikari, Burcin Ikiz, Jyoti Mishra
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The climate crisis combined with air pollution is increasingly disrupting the foundational conditions for healthy cognitive development and learning, particularly among children in vulnerable regions. In South and Southeast Asia, escalating levels of air pollution and extreme heat are synergistically threatening the neurocognitive health, educational attainment, and long-term potential of millions of children. Many schools in the region lack adequate ventilation, cooling infrastructure, and environmental monitoring, leaving children vulnerable to both acute and chronic health impacts. The review explores the effects of air pollution and extreme heat on cognitive function, behaviour, and academic performance in children. It highlights the urgent need to prioritise children's brain health in climate adaptation, education, and public health agendas. Beyond outlining the problem, the article identifies critical gaps and opportunities for action. It stresses the need for real-time, child-centred data as a missing link for informed decision-making. The lack of public awareness and a compelling narrative around the climate cognition link is also examined as a driver of inaction. Finally, the article offers a science-driven blueprint for change, outlining a path forward that integrates neuroscience, environmental monitoring, education reform, and equity-focused policy. Understanding and responding to this "climate cognition crisis" is not only a public health and developmental imperative, but also central to building resilient, future-ready societies in South and Southeast Asia.

气候认知危机:紧急呼吁解决空气污染和极端高温对南亚和东南亚儿童学习环境的影响。
气候危机加上空气污染正日益破坏健康认知发展和学习的基本条件,特别是脆弱地区的儿童。在南亚和东南亚,不断升级的空气污染和极端高温正协同威胁着数百万儿童的神经认知健康、受教育程度和长期潜力。该地区的许多学校缺乏足够的通风、制冷基础设施和环境监测,使儿童容易受到急性和慢性健康影响。这篇综述探讨了空气污染和极端高温对儿童认知功能、行为和学习成绩的影响。报告强调,迫切需要在气候适应、教育和公共卫生议程中优先考虑儿童的大脑健康。除了概述问题,文章还指出了关键的差距和采取行动的机会。它强调需要实时的、以儿童为中心的数据,作为知情决策的缺失环节。缺乏公众意识和围绕气候认知联系的令人信服的叙述也被视为不作为的驱动因素。最后,本文提供了一个科学驱动的变革蓝图,概述了一条整合神经科学、环境监测、教育改革和以公平为重点的政策的前进道路。理解和应对这一“气候认知危机”不仅是公共卫生和发展的当务之急,而且对于在南亚和东南亚建设有复原力、面向未来的社会至关重要。
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
Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences
Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
89
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: The Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences (MJMS) is a peer-reviewed, open-access, fully online journal that is published at least six times a year. The journal’s scope encompasses all aspects of medical sciences including biomedical, allied health, clinical and social sciences. We accept high quality papers from basic to translational research especially from low & middle income countries, as classified by the United Nations & World Bank (https://datahelpdesk.worldbank.org/knowledgebase/ articles/906519), with the aim that published research will benefit back the bottom billion population from these countries. Manuscripts submitted from developed or high income countries to MJMS must contain data and information that will benefit the socio-health and bio-medical sciences of these low and middle income countries. The MJMS editorial board consists of internationally regarded clinicians and scientists from low and middle income countries.
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