{"title":"The Multifaceted Consequences of Climate Change on Human Health","authors":"Wasim Alamgir, Hina Shan","doi":"10.37185/343","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Human health, worldwide, is in great peril due to pollution and climate change. The sheer scale and expanse ofclimate change manifested as extreme weather conditions, changes in air quality, natural calamities, and vectorecology are negatively impacting human health. Frequent floods, wildfires, erratic rainfall, sea-level rise, andcyclones were documented across the globe in countries including Australia, Algeria, Brazil, China, Italy,Greece, Malaysia, Nigeria, Pakistan, South Africa, Spain, Türkiye and USA.1 The growing number of adversehealth outcomes due to climate hazards is increasing the burden in the health services already impacted by theCOVID-19 pandemic, co-epidemics (e.g., human immunodeficiency virus and tuberculosis) and double burdenof disease (communicable and non-communicable diseases). Anthropogenic activities have drasticallyincreased atmospheric greenhouse gas levels leading to a significant increase in the global mean surfacetemperature by 1.1° Celsius, warmer than the pre-industrial levels. The past seven years were declared thewarmest, the 1.5-degree climate target agreed upon at the Conference of the Parties (COP21 )in Paris seems far out of reach as the global mean surface temperature is projected to rise to a dangerous level of between 1.5oCelsius and 3.5 Celsius by the end of this century.1 \nThe ongoing climate stressors affect the populations that are most vulnerable and marginalised, like olderpeople, pregnant women, new-born babies, people who are socially deprived and people working outdoors.Human exposure to intense heat is associated with heatstroke, adverse pregnancy outcomes (includingpremature birth), acute kidney injury, disturbed sleep patterns, mental health problems, cancers andworsening of underlying respiratory and cardiac disease. Annually, three million deaths are attributable toinfections caused by outdoor PM2-5 air pollution.1 Asthma, the most common respiratory illness amongadolescents, is influenced by higher and longer pollen seasons and poor air quality, increasing the risk of acuteasthma episodes. Vector-borne diseases like malaria and dengue have increased in Africa and Asia. Rare severeinfectious diseases caused by Naegleria fowleri, Nipah virus, and Coccidiodes spp have also increased. \nExtreme climate events also disrupt the food supply; leading to malnutrition and disease susceptibility. Humancontact with environmentally mediated pathogens through food, water, animals, or insect vectors, causessubstantial morbidity and mortality globally. Waterborne diseases are rising globally, especially in LMICs, withoutbreaks of diarrhoea, hepatitis, cholera, malaria, dengue, salmonellosis, typhoid, dysentery, schistosomiasis,and giardiasis.2 Moreover, Vibrio pathogens are more transmissible due to rising coastal water temperatures. In Pakistan, waterborne diseases are becoming more frequent due to climate-based increased variations intemperatures and rainfall patterns, which have led to the challenges of water unavailability and exposure tounsafe water. In 2017, an epidemic of drug-resistance typhoid resulted in an untreatable and prolongedinfection in Pakistani citizens resulting in many deaths in children below 15 years of age. \nThe footprint of climate change is becoming more extreme in South Asia; India, Pakistan and the Philippinesare in the “high” bracket” of the vulnerability assessment that has been most severely impacted by extremeweather events, according to the latest report by Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Pakistan,a negligible contributor to the overall carbon footprint, is still among the top ten countries vulnerable to climatechange by Global Climate Risk Index 2021.1 The recent heavy rainfall and floods in Pakistan have resulted in theloss of life and livelihood. Human suffering, socioeconomic constraints, involuntary migration anddisplacement in climate emergency are massive. \nThe response to the needs of the disaster-affected population remains a key challenge in terms of resourceconstraints, afflicted health systems, changing disease burden, the provision of shelter and emergency reliefitems, delivering lifesaving and livelihood assistance, water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) needs, preventionof disease outbreaks, addressing malnutrition, Gender-based violence (GBV), Psychosocial Support (PSS),dignified protection, and family tracing. \nThe recent 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP27) concluded with a cover decision known asthe Sharm el-Sheikh Implementation Plan. COP27 concluded to provide “loss and damage” funding forvulnerable countries hit hard by climate disasters. The other decisions included cutting greenhouse gasemissions and adapting to the inevitable impacts of climate change, boosting finance and technology support,and widening the capacity building needed by LMICs. \nThe planet's warming is jeopardising human health, demanding immediate climate action for mitigation andadaptation, fossil fuel reduction, building resilient communities, investing in emerging green technology, andintegrating climate education into medical and school curricula.1-3 In our efforts towards a sustainable planet, itis critical to accelerate climate action by strengthening multisectoral engagement. \nEditor-in-Chief \nHow to cite this: Alamgir W, Shan H. The Multifaceted Consequences of Climate Change on Human Health. Life and Science. 2023; 4(1): 1-2. doi: http://doi.org/10.37185/LnS.1.1.343 \n ","PeriodicalId":15254,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Biology and Life Science","volume":"129 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Biology and Life Science","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.37185/343","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Human health, worldwide, is in great peril due to pollution and climate change. The sheer scale and expanse ofclimate change manifested as extreme weather conditions, changes in air quality, natural calamities, and vectorecology are negatively impacting human health. Frequent floods, wildfires, erratic rainfall, sea-level rise, andcyclones were documented across the globe in countries including Australia, Algeria, Brazil, China, Italy,Greece, Malaysia, Nigeria, Pakistan, South Africa, Spain, Türkiye and USA.1 The growing number of adversehealth outcomes due to climate hazards is increasing the burden in the health services already impacted by theCOVID-19 pandemic, co-epidemics (e.g., human immunodeficiency virus and tuberculosis) and double burdenof disease (communicable and non-communicable diseases). Anthropogenic activities have drasticallyincreased atmospheric greenhouse gas levels leading to a significant increase in the global mean surfacetemperature by 1.1° Celsius, warmer than the pre-industrial levels. The past seven years were declared thewarmest, the 1.5-degree climate target agreed upon at the Conference of the Parties (COP21 )in Paris seems far out of reach as the global mean surface temperature is projected to rise to a dangerous level of between 1.5oCelsius and 3.5 Celsius by the end of this century.1
The ongoing climate stressors affect the populations that are most vulnerable and marginalised, like olderpeople, pregnant women, new-born babies, people who are socially deprived and people working outdoors.Human exposure to intense heat is associated with heatstroke, adverse pregnancy outcomes (includingpremature birth), acute kidney injury, disturbed sleep patterns, mental health problems, cancers andworsening of underlying respiratory and cardiac disease. Annually, three million deaths are attributable toinfections caused by outdoor PM2-5 air pollution.1 Asthma, the most common respiratory illness amongadolescents, is influenced by higher and longer pollen seasons and poor air quality, increasing the risk of acuteasthma episodes. Vector-borne diseases like malaria and dengue have increased in Africa and Asia. Rare severeinfectious diseases caused by Naegleria fowleri, Nipah virus, and Coccidiodes spp have also increased.
Extreme climate events also disrupt the food supply; leading to malnutrition and disease susceptibility. Humancontact with environmentally mediated pathogens through food, water, animals, or insect vectors, causessubstantial morbidity and mortality globally. Waterborne diseases are rising globally, especially in LMICs, withoutbreaks of diarrhoea, hepatitis, cholera, malaria, dengue, salmonellosis, typhoid, dysentery, schistosomiasis,and giardiasis.2 Moreover, Vibrio pathogens are more transmissible due to rising coastal water temperatures. In Pakistan, waterborne diseases are becoming more frequent due to climate-based increased variations intemperatures and rainfall patterns, which have led to the challenges of water unavailability and exposure tounsafe water. In 2017, an epidemic of drug-resistance typhoid resulted in an untreatable and prolongedinfection in Pakistani citizens resulting in many deaths in children below 15 years of age.
The footprint of climate change is becoming more extreme in South Asia; India, Pakistan and the Philippinesare in the “high” bracket” of the vulnerability assessment that has been most severely impacted by extremeweather events, according to the latest report by Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Pakistan,a negligible contributor to the overall carbon footprint, is still among the top ten countries vulnerable to climatechange by Global Climate Risk Index 2021.1 The recent heavy rainfall and floods in Pakistan have resulted in theloss of life and livelihood. Human suffering, socioeconomic constraints, involuntary migration anddisplacement in climate emergency are massive.
The response to the needs of the disaster-affected population remains a key challenge in terms of resourceconstraints, afflicted health systems, changing disease burden, the provision of shelter and emergency reliefitems, delivering lifesaving and livelihood assistance, water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) needs, preventionof disease outbreaks, addressing malnutrition, Gender-based violence (GBV), Psychosocial Support (PSS),dignified protection, and family tracing.
The recent 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP27) concluded with a cover decision known asthe Sharm el-Sheikh Implementation Plan. COP27 concluded to provide “loss and damage” funding forvulnerable countries hit hard by climate disasters. The other decisions included cutting greenhouse gasemissions and adapting to the inevitable impacts of climate change, boosting finance and technology support,and widening the capacity building needed by LMICs.
The planet's warming is jeopardising human health, demanding immediate climate action for mitigation andadaptation, fossil fuel reduction, building resilient communities, investing in emerging green technology, andintegrating climate education into medical and school curricula.1-3 In our efforts towards a sustainable planet, itis critical to accelerate climate action by strengthening multisectoral engagement.
Editor-in-Chief
How to cite this: Alamgir W, Shan H. The Multifaceted Consequences of Climate Change on Human Health. Life and Science. 2023; 4(1): 1-2. doi: http://doi.org/10.37185/LnS.1.1.343
由于污染和气候变化,全世界的人类健康正处于极大的危险之中。气候变化的规模和广度表现为极端天气条件、空气质量变化、自然灾害和病媒,对人类健康产生了负面影响。澳大利亚、阿尔及利亚、巴西、中国、意大利、希腊、马来西亚、尼日利亚、巴基斯坦、南非、西班牙、土耳其和美国等国记录到频繁的洪水、野火、不稳定的降雨、海平面上升和气旋。1气候灾害造成的不利健康后果越来越多,正在增加卫生服务部门的负担,这些卫生服务部门已经受到2019冠状病毒病大流行、共流行(例如:人体免疫缺陷病毒和结核病)和双重疾病负担(传染病和非传染性疾病)。人为活动大大增加了大气温室气体水平,导致全球平均地表温度显著升高1.1摄氏度,高于工业化前水平。过去的七年被认为是最热的,在巴黎举行的缔约方会议(COP21)上达成的1.5摄氏度的气候目标似乎遥不可及,因为预计到本世纪末全球平均表面温度将上升到1.5摄氏度至3.5摄氏度的危险水平持续的气候压力因素影响着最脆弱和最边缘化的人群,如老年人、孕妇、新生儿、社会被剥夺者和户外工作者。人类暴露于高温与中暑、不良妊娠结局(包括早产)、急性肾损伤、睡眠模式紊乱、精神健康问题、癌症以及潜在呼吸和心脏疾病恶化有关。每年有300万人死于室外PM2-5空气污染造成的感染哮喘是青少年中最常见的呼吸系统疾病,受较高且较长的花粉季节和较差的空气质量的影响,增加了急性哮喘发作的风险。疟疾和登革热等病媒传播疾病在非洲和亚洲有所增加。由福氏奈格里氏杆菌、尼帕病毒和球虫引起的罕见严重传染病也有所增加。极端气候事件也扰乱了粮食供应;导致营养不良和疾病易感性。人类通过食物、水、动物或昆虫媒介与环境介导的病原体接触,在全球范围内导致大量发病率和死亡率。水媒疾病在全球范围内呈上升趋势,特别是在中低收入国家,暴发了腹泻、肝炎、霍乱、疟疾、登革热、沙门氏菌病、伤寒、痢疾、血吸虫病和贾第虫病2此外,由于沿海水温上升,弧菌病原体更容易传播。在巴基斯坦,由于基于气候的温度和降雨模式变化加剧,水传播疾病变得越来越频繁,这导致了水供应不足和接触不安全水的挑战。2017年,耐药伤寒疫情导致巴基斯坦公民出现无法治疗的长期感染,导致许多15岁以下儿童死亡。气候变化的足迹在南亚变得越来越极端;根据政府间气候变化专门委员会(IPCC)的最新报告,印度、巴基斯坦和菲律宾在脆弱性评估中处于“高”等级,受到极端天气事件的影响最为严重。巴基斯坦对全球碳足迹的贡献微不足道,但根据全球气候风险指数(Global Climate Risk Index 2021.1),巴基斯坦仍然是易受气候变化影响的十大国家之一。巴基斯坦最近的暴雨和洪水造成了生命和生计的损失。在气候紧急情况下,人类苦难、社会经济制约、非自愿移徙和流离失所是巨大的。在资源限制、受影响的卫生系统、不断变化的疾病负担、提供住所和紧急救济物品、提供救生和生计援助、水、环境卫生和个人卫生需求、预防疾病暴发、解决营养不良、基于性别的暴力、社会心理支持、有尊严的保护和家庭追踪等方面,应对受灾人口的需求仍然是一项重大挑战。最近的2022年联合国气候变化大会(COP27)以一项名为“沙姆沙伊赫实施计划”的临时决定结束。第27届联合国气候变化大会的结论是,为遭受气候灾害严重打击的脆弱国家提供“损失和损害”资金。其他决定包括减少温室气体排放和适应不可避免的气候变化影响,增加资金和技术支持,以及扩大中低收入国家所需的能力建设。