气候和环境危机:对澳大利亚以及土著和托雷斯海峡岛民耳和听力健康的影响

IF 8.5 2区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Georgia M Tongs (Wiradjuri), Isabella Ludbrook, Jennifer H Martin, Robert Eisenberg, Kelvin M Kong (Worimi)
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Professor Kelvin Kong AM, a Worimi man and Australia's first Indigenous ear, nose and throat surgeon, has dedicated his career to addressing health inequities, particularly in ear health, guided by cultural values and respect for community leadership. Dr Georgia Tongs, a Wiradjuri woman and emerging researcher, contributes her passion for Indigenous-led health research, strengthened by mentorship and collaboration within the team.</p><p>Non-Indigenous team members — Associate Professor Robert Eisenberg, Professor Jennifer Martin, and Dr Isabella Ludbrook — bring their expertise in surgery, public health, climate advocacy, and infectious diseases, while actively engaging in culturally safe, Indigenous-led research practices. Their work is informed by long-standing partnerships with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, guided by principles of self-determination, reciprocity and respect.</p><p>This research is grounded with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community priorities driving its direction. The project emerged from discussions at the Otitis Media Australia (OMOZ) conference (www.omoz.com.au), where Indigenous health leaders highlighted the urgent need to address otitis media — a condition disproportionately affecting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children — alongside the growing threats of climate change.</p><p>We recognise that climate change is not just an environmental issue but a critical health justice issue for First Nations peoples, who face systemic inequities compounded by ecological disruption. Our collective approach centres Indigenous knowledge, resilience, and leadership in developing solutions that promote health equity and climate resilience.</p><p>Through this work, we strive to amplify Indigenous voices, uphold cultural authority, and contribute to a future where health and climate policies are shaped by the wisdom and needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities.</p><p>We acknowledge the Consolidated criteria for strengthening the reporting of health research involving Indigenous Peoples (CONSIDER) statement<span><sup>1</sup></span> and have outlined how each principle was addressed during the research process (Supporting Information).</p><p>Otitis media, which is a bacterial infection of the middle ear, is at risk of becoming more prevalent with the progression of climate change. The condition already occurs more frequently in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (henceforth First Nations) populations who are disproportionately affected by climate change.<span><sup>2</sup></span> Pathogenesis is thought to be influenced by changes in air and water quality and exacerbated by flourishing new organisms and worsening antimicrobial resistance. Prevention and early detection of disease can be disrupted by social instability resulting from environmental changes.<span><sup>3</sup></span></p><p>Otitis media globally affects over 80% of children under the age of three years.<span><sup>4</sup></span> It has the potential to cause life-threatening complications if infection spreads to the bone or brain, but it is more commonly associated with temporary or long term hearing loss. Untreated, paediatric hearing loss is associated with delays in speech and language development, poorer educational outcomes, higher adulthood unemployment, and increased contact with the criminal justice system.<span><sup>3</sup></span> Given its profound and enduring impacts, paediatric hearing loss is a developmental emergency.</p><p>Hearing and language are particularly important in First Nations communities, as knowledge sharing is often done through oral storytelling. The rate of Australian First Nations children diagnosed with otitis media varies greatly with age group and geographical location, but it is generally accepted to be among the highest globally — well over the 4% disease prevalence classifying a major public health concern.<span><sup>3, 5-7</sup></span> In remote areas, the cohort prevalence for children under five years of age has been recorded up to 90%, and even in urban areas, First Nations children experience a burden of disease three times that of non-First Nations children.<span><sup>3</sup></span> Disease may manifest within weeks of birth and is often insidious. Structural barriers to health care access and systemic racism and stigma result in delayed diagnosis and more late-stage or chronic complications for First Nations populations compared with non-Indigenous Australians.<span><sup>3</sup></span></p><p>Climate change, which is defined as the long term change in average weather patterns, has been identified by the World Health Organization as the single biggest health threat facing humanity.<span><sup>8</sup></span> This is due to its many impacts on the physical, environmental and social systems in which individuals are born, live, grow, eat, and work. Although there are unique regional hazards and differing levels of vulnerability to such hazards, expected trends as the climate changes include increased temperature extremes, changes in precipitation patterns, poorer air quality, and more frequent extreme weather events.<span><sup>8</sup></span></p><p>The health effects of climate change can be direct, such as heat-related illness and traumatic injury from extreme weather events, or indirect, including through food and water insecurity, overwhelmed health resources, and increased opportunities for spread of vector- and water-borne diseases.<span><sup>8, 9</sup></span> Strategies to combat these issues involve mitigation, aiming to slow the process of climate change, and adaptation of health systems to a new climate.<span><sup>10</sup></span></p><p>Prevention and early detection of otitis media are closely linked with addressing modifiable risk factors such as nutrition and housing density.<span><sup>3</sup></span> These social determinants of health reflect broader societal inequities and are inherently tied to our environment, including climate.<span><sup>8</sup></span> This perspective article addresses how direct and indirect risk factors for otitis media are likely to be affected by climate change and outlines the importance of climate change mitigation and adaption to reduce the burden of ear disease on First Nations children.</p><p>Populations at greater risk of climate change-related health issues, as identified by the Australian Government, include children, people of low socio-economic status, geographically isolated communities, and First Nations peoples.<span><sup>11</sup></span> Rural and remote communities with a high proportion of First Nations residents are therefore likely to be facing substantially disproportionate effects of climate change.<span><sup>2, 12, 13</sup></span></p><p>There is an intrinsic relationship between the wellbeing of the land, the community and the individual in First Nations culture.<span><sup>13</sup></span> First Nations peoples have already adapted to tens of thousands of years of changing climate in Australia.<span><sup>14</sup></span> Conversely, colonial perspectives of land ownership (rather than custodianship) have resulted in significant physical, emotional and spiritual harm relating to climate change. Extreme weather events such as bushfires and floods may result in damage to important sacred sites, homes and livelihoods.<span><sup>13</sup></span> Eco-migration of First Nations communities from Country can be expected as land is exposed to climate extremes of heatwaves, rising sea levels, and drought. Existing social inequities driven by systemic racism may hinder capacity for communities to adapt to these changes.<span><sup>8</sup></span></p><p>A 2024 systematic mapping review of 48 Australian studies on climate change health interventions identified studies involving priority populations, including First Nations people.<span><sup>15</sup></span> Surprisingly, no studies were conducted in Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs). The literature addressed general health outcome consequences, rather than specific mitigation or adaptation solutions.<span><sup>15</sup></span></p><p>Emerging evidence suggests that climate change may directly affect the prevalence of otitis media through pathological susceptibility to changes in temperature, humidity, and air and water quality. The indirect effects of climate change exacerbate existing societal inequities such as food and water insecurity, barriers to health care access, and housing instability. It is theorised that the impact of otitis media may be compounded by decreased access to services from extreme weather events, poor nutrition following reduction in local food yields and increased cost of living, oversaturation of health services, domestic overcrowding, aggravation of comorbid chronic disease, and geographical isolation.<span><sup>9</sup></span></p><p>Climate change is not solely an environmental issue, but a health issue affecting highly specific body systems and with disproportional effects on priority populations. Otitis media is just one example of a common and serious childhood illness with economic, social and environmental risk factors on track to escalate with the effects of climate change. First Nations leadership can help mitigate climate change by shifting the dominant culture to a view of land custodianship rather than ownership. The capacity of affected communities to adapt to eco-migration, food and water insecurity, and health service stress will depend on proactive investment in strong primary health systems and social stability.</p><p>Open access publishing facilitated by University of New South Wales, as part of the Wiley - University of New South Wales agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians.</p><p>Kelvin Kong is a Guest Editor for the 2025 NAIDOC Week <i>MJA</i> Special Issue and was not involved in any editorial decision making about this article.</p><p>Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.</p><p>Tongs G: Formal analysis, investigation, methodology, resources, visualization, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing. Ludbrook I: Conceptualization, formal analysis, methodology, project administration, resources, supervision, visualization, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing. Martin J: Conceptualization, formal analysis, methodology, project administration, supervision, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing. Eisenberg R: Conceptualization, data curation, formal analysis, investigation, methodology, project administration, supervision, visualization, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing. Kong K: Conceptualization, formal analysis, investigation, methodology, resources, supervision, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing.</p>","PeriodicalId":18214,"journal":{"name":"Medical Journal of Australia","volume":"223 1","pages":"14-18"},"PeriodicalIF":8.5000,"publicationDate":"2025-07-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.5694/mja2.52689","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Climate and environmental crisis: effects on ear and hearing health in Australia and for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples\",\"authors\":\"Georgia M Tongs (Wiradjuri),&nbsp;Isabella Ludbrook,&nbsp;Jennifer H Martin,&nbsp;Robert Eisenberg,&nbsp;Kelvin M Kong (Worimi)\",\"doi\":\"10.5694/mja2.52689\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>As a collaborative research team, we acknowledge the diverse perspectives, lived experiences, and cultural knowledges that shape our work. We are united in our commitment to examining health and climate through the lens of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, recognising the profound and disproportionate impacts these intersecting issues have on Indigenous communities globally.</p><p>Our team includes Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander researchers, clinicians and allies who bring deep cultural, professional and personal insights to this work. Professor Kelvin Kong AM, a Worimi man and Australia's first Indigenous ear, nose and throat surgeon, has dedicated his career to addressing health inequities, particularly in ear health, guided by cultural values and respect for community leadership. Dr Georgia Tongs, a Wiradjuri woman and emerging researcher, contributes her passion for Indigenous-led health research, strengthened by mentorship and collaboration within the team.</p><p>Non-Indigenous team members — Associate Professor Robert Eisenberg, Professor Jennifer Martin, and Dr Isabella Ludbrook — bring their expertise in surgery, public health, climate advocacy, and infectious diseases, while actively engaging in culturally safe, Indigenous-led research practices. Their work is informed by long-standing partnerships with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, guided by principles of self-determination, reciprocity and respect.</p><p>This research is grounded with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community priorities driving its direction. The project emerged from discussions at the Otitis Media Australia (OMOZ) conference (www.omoz.com.au), where Indigenous health leaders highlighted the urgent need to address otitis media — a condition disproportionately affecting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children — alongside the growing threats of climate change.</p><p>We recognise that climate change is not just an environmental issue but a critical health justice issue for First Nations peoples, who face systemic inequities compounded by ecological disruption. Our collective approach centres Indigenous knowledge, resilience, and leadership in developing solutions that promote health equity and climate resilience.</p><p>Through this work, we strive to amplify Indigenous voices, uphold cultural authority, and contribute to a future where health and climate policies are shaped by the wisdom and needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities.</p><p>We acknowledge the Consolidated criteria for strengthening the reporting of health research involving Indigenous Peoples (CONSIDER) statement<span><sup>1</sup></span> and have outlined how each principle was addressed during the research process (Supporting Information).</p><p>Otitis media, which is a bacterial infection of the middle ear, is at risk of becoming more prevalent with the progression of climate change. The condition already occurs more frequently in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (henceforth First Nations) populations who are disproportionately affected by climate change.<span><sup>2</sup></span> Pathogenesis is thought to be influenced by changes in air and water quality and exacerbated by flourishing new organisms and worsening antimicrobial resistance. Prevention and early detection of disease can be disrupted by social instability resulting from environmental changes.<span><sup>3</sup></span></p><p>Otitis media globally affects over 80% of children under the age of three years.<span><sup>4</sup></span> It has the potential to cause life-threatening complications if infection spreads to the bone or brain, but it is more commonly associated with temporary or long term hearing loss. Untreated, paediatric hearing loss is associated with delays in speech and language development, poorer educational outcomes, higher adulthood unemployment, and increased contact with the criminal justice system.<span><sup>3</sup></span> Given its profound and enduring impacts, paediatric hearing loss is a developmental emergency.</p><p>Hearing and language are particularly important in First Nations communities, as knowledge sharing is often done through oral storytelling. The rate of Australian First Nations children diagnosed with otitis media varies greatly with age group and geographical location, but it is generally accepted to be among the highest globally — well over the 4% disease prevalence classifying a major public health concern.<span><sup>3, 5-7</sup></span> In remote areas, the cohort prevalence for children under five years of age has been recorded up to 90%, and even in urban areas, First Nations children experience a burden of disease three times that of non-First Nations children.<span><sup>3</sup></span> Disease may manifest within weeks of birth and is often insidious. Structural barriers to health care access and systemic racism and stigma result in delayed diagnosis and more late-stage or chronic complications for First Nations populations compared with non-Indigenous Australians.<span><sup>3</sup></span></p><p>Climate change, which is defined as the long term change in average weather patterns, has been identified by the World Health Organization as the single biggest health threat facing humanity.<span><sup>8</sup></span> This is due to its many impacts on the physical, environmental and social systems in which individuals are born, live, grow, eat, and work. Although there are unique regional hazards and differing levels of vulnerability to such hazards, expected trends as the climate changes include increased temperature extremes, changes in precipitation patterns, poorer air quality, and more frequent extreme weather events.<span><sup>8</sup></span></p><p>The health effects of climate change can be direct, such as heat-related illness and traumatic injury from extreme weather events, or indirect, including through food and water insecurity, overwhelmed health resources, and increased opportunities for spread of vector- and water-borne diseases.<span><sup>8, 9</sup></span> Strategies to combat these issues involve mitigation, aiming to slow the process of climate change, and adaptation of health systems to a new climate.<span><sup>10</sup></span></p><p>Prevention and early detection of otitis media are closely linked with addressing modifiable risk factors such as nutrition and housing density.<span><sup>3</sup></span> These social determinants of health reflect broader societal inequities and are inherently tied to our environment, including climate.<span><sup>8</sup></span> This perspective article addresses how direct and indirect risk factors for otitis media are likely to be affected by climate change and outlines the importance of climate change mitigation and adaption to reduce the burden of ear disease on First Nations children.</p><p>Populations at greater risk of climate change-related health issues, as identified by the Australian Government, include children, people of low socio-economic status, geographically isolated communities, and First Nations peoples.<span><sup>11</sup></span> Rural and remote communities with a high proportion of First Nations residents are therefore likely to be facing substantially disproportionate effects of climate change.<span><sup>2, 12, 13</sup></span></p><p>There is an intrinsic relationship between the wellbeing of the land, the community and the individual in First Nations culture.<span><sup>13</sup></span> First Nations peoples have already adapted to tens of thousands of years of changing climate in Australia.<span><sup>14</sup></span> Conversely, colonial perspectives of land ownership (rather than custodianship) have resulted in significant physical, emotional and spiritual harm relating to climate change. Extreme weather events such as bushfires and floods may result in damage to important sacred sites, homes and livelihoods.<span><sup>13</sup></span> Eco-migration of First Nations communities from Country can be expected as land is exposed to climate extremes of heatwaves, rising sea levels, and drought. Existing social inequities driven by systemic racism may hinder capacity for communities to adapt to these changes.<span><sup>8</sup></span></p><p>A 2024 systematic mapping review of 48 Australian studies on climate change health interventions identified studies involving priority populations, including First Nations people.<span><sup>15</sup></span> Surprisingly, no studies were conducted in Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs). The literature addressed general health outcome consequences, rather than specific mitigation or adaptation solutions.<span><sup>15</sup></span></p><p>Emerging evidence suggests that climate change may directly affect the prevalence of otitis media through pathological susceptibility to changes in temperature, humidity, and air and water quality. The indirect effects of climate change exacerbate existing societal inequities such as food and water insecurity, barriers to health care access, and housing instability. It is theorised that the impact of otitis media may be compounded by decreased access to services from extreme weather events, poor nutrition following reduction in local food yields and increased cost of living, oversaturation of health services, domestic overcrowding, aggravation of comorbid chronic disease, and geographical isolation.<span><sup>9</sup></span></p><p>Climate change is not solely an environmental issue, but a health issue affecting highly specific body systems and with disproportional effects on priority populations. Otitis media is just one example of a common and serious childhood illness with economic, social and environmental risk factors on track to escalate with the effects of climate change. First Nations leadership can help mitigate climate change by shifting the dominant culture to a view of land custodianship rather than ownership. The capacity of affected communities to adapt to eco-migration, food and water insecurity, and health service stress will depend on proactive investment in strong primary health systems and social stability.</p><p>Open access publishing facilitated by University of New South Wales, as part of the Wiley - University of New South Wales agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians.</p><p>Kelvin Kong is a Guest Editor for the 2025 NAIDOC Week <i>MJA</i> Special Issue and was not involved in any editorial decision making about this article.</p><p>Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.</p><p>Tongs G: Formal analysis, investigation, methodology, resources, visualization, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing. Ludbrook I: Conceptualization, formal analysis, methodology, project administration, resources, supervision, visualization, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing. Martin J: Conceptualization, formal analysis, methodology, project administration, supervision, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing. Eisenberg R: Conceptualization, data curation, formal analysis, investigation, methodology, project administration, supervision, visualization, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing. 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摘要

作为一个合作研究团队,我们承认塑造我们工作的不同观点、生活经历和文化知识。我们团结一致,致力于从土著和托雷斯海峡岛民的角度审视健康和气候问题,认识到这些相互交织的问题对全球土著社区产生了深远和不成比例的影响。我们的团队包括原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民的研究人员、临床医生和盟友,他们为这项工作带来了深刻的文化、专业和个人见解。Kelvin Kong AM教授是Worimi人,也是澳大利亚第一位土著耳鼻喉外科医生,他在文化价值观和尊重社区领导的指导下,致力于解决健康不平等问题,特别是在耳部健康方面。Georgia tong博士是Wiradjuri妇女和新兴研究人员,她对土著主导的卫生研究充满热情,并通过团队内的指导和合作得到加强。非土著团队成员——罗伯特·艾森伯格副教授、詹妮弗·马丁教授和伊莎贝拉·路德布鲁克博士——带来了他们在外科、公共卫生、气候倡导和传染病方面的专业知识,同时积极参与文化上安全的、土著主导的研究实践。他们的工作是在自决、互惠和尊重原则的指导下,与土著和托雷斯海峡岛民社区建立长期伙伴关系。这项研究是基于土著和托雷斯海峡岛民社区的优先事项推动其方向。该项目是在澳大利亚中耳炎会议(OMOZ) (www.omoz.com.au)的讨论中产生的,土著卫生领导人强调了解决中耳炎的迫切需要,这是一种严重影响土著和托雷斯海峡岛民儿童的疾病,同时也面临着日益严重的气候变化威胁。我们认识到,气候变化不仅是环境问题,而且是土著人民健康正义的关键问题,他们面临着系统性不平等和生态破坏。我们的集体做法以土著知识、复原力和领导力为中心,制定促进卫生公平和气候复原力的解决方案。通过这项工作,我们努力扩大土著的声音,维护文化权威,并为未来的健康和气候政策由土著和托雷斯海峡岛民社区的智慧和需求决定作出贡献。我们确认《加强报告涉及土著人民的健康研究的综合标准》(《考虑》)声明1,并概述了在研究过程中如何处理每项原则(支持资料)。中耳炎是一种中耳细菌感染,随着气候变化的进展,中耳炎有变得更加普遍的危险。这种情况在土著居民和托雷斯海峡岛民(从今以后的第一民族)中已经更频繁地发生,他们不成比例地受到气候变化的影响发病机制被认为受空气和水质变化的影响,并因新生物体的繁盛和抗菌素耐药性的恶化而加剧。环境变化造成的社会不稳定可能破坏疾病的预防和早期发现。3 .中耳炎影响着全球80%以上的3岁以下儿童如果感染扩散到骨骼或大脑,它有可能导致危及生命的并发症,但它更常与暂时或长期听力丧失有关。未经治疗的儿童听力损失与言语和语言发育迟缓、教育成果较差、成年失业率较高以及与刑事司法系统的接触增加有关鉴于其深远和持久的影响,儿科听力损失是一种发育紧急情况。听力和语言在原住民社区尤为重要,因为知识分享通常是通过口述故事来完成的。澳大利亚第一民族儿童被诊断患有中耳炎的比率因年龄组和地理位置的不同而有很大差异,但普遍认为它是全球最高的-远远超过4%的疾病患病率,这是一个主要的公共卫生问题。3,5 -7在偏远地区,五岁以下儿童的队列患病率高达90%,甚至在城市地区,第一民族儿童的疾病负担是非第一民族儿童的三倍疾病可能在出生后几周内出现,而且往往是潜伏的。与非土著澳大利亚人相比,获得保健服务的结构性障碍以及系统性的种族主义和耻辱导致第一民族人口的诊断延迟和更多的晚期或慢性并发症。 3 .气候变化被定义为平均天气模式的长期变化,已被世界卫生组织确定为人类面临的单一最大的健康威胁这是由于它对个人出生、生活、成长、饮食和工作的物理、环境和社会系统产生了许多影响。尽管存在独特的区域灾害和不同程度的脆弱性,但随着气候变化,预期的趋势包括极端温度增加、降水模式变化、空气质量下降和极端天气事件更加频繁。8 .气候变化对健康的影响可以是直接的,如与热有关的疾病和极端天气事件造成的创伤性伤害,也可以是间接的,包括粮食和水不安全、卫生资源不堪重负以及病媒和水媒疾病传播机会增加。8,9应对这些问题的战略包括减缓气候变化进程,以及使卫生系统适应新的气候。中耳炎的预防和早期发现与解决可改变的风险因素(如营养和住房密度)密切相关这些健康的社会决定因素反映了更广泛的社会不平等,并与包括气候在内的我们的环境有着内在的联系这篇观点文章阐述了中耳炎的直接和间接风险因素如何可能受到气候变化的影响,并概述了减缓和适应气候变化对减轻第一民族儿童耳部疾病负担的重要性。11 .澳大利亚政府指出,面临与气候变化有关的健康问题更大风险的人口包括儿童、社会经济地位低的人、地理上孤立的社区和第一民族因此,土著居民比例很高的农村和偏远社区很可能面临气候变化的严重不成比例的影响。在第一民族文化中,土地、社区和个人的福祉之间有着内在的联系土著民族已经适应了澳大利亚数万年来不断变化的气候。14相反,土地所有权(而不是监护权)的殖民观点导致了与气候变化有关的重大身体、情感和精神伤害。极端天气事件,如森林大火和洪水,可能会对重要的圣地、家园和生计造成破坏由于土地受到热浪、海平面上升和干旱等极端气候的影响,原住民社区可能会从农村生态移民。由系统性种族主义驱动的现有社会不平等可能会阻碍社区适应这些变化的能力。82024年对48项澳大利亚气候变化健康干预研究进行的系统绘图审查确定了涉及优先人群的研究,包括第一民族令人惊讶的是,没有在土著社区控制的卫生组织(ACCHOs)中进行研究。这些文献涉及一般的健康后果,而不是具体的缓解或适应解决办法。新出现的证据表明,气候变化可能通过对温度、湿度、空气和水质变化的病理敏感性直接影响中耳炎的流行。气候变化的间接影响加剧了现有的社会不平等,如粮食和水不安全、获得医疗保健的障碍以及住房不稳定。从理论上讲,中耳炎的影响可能会因极端天气事件导致获得服务的机会减少、当地粮食产量减少和生活成本增加导致营养不良、卫生服务过度饱和、家庭过度拥挤、共病慢性疾病加剧以及地理隔离而加剧。9 .气候变化不仅是一个环境问题,而且是一个影响高度特定的身体系统并对重点人群产生不成比例影响的健康问题。中耳炎只是一种常见和严重的儿童疾病的一个例子,随着气候变化的影响,经济、社会和环境风险因素正在逐步升级。第一民族的领导可以通过将主导文化转变为土地监护而不是所有权的观点来帮助减缓气候变化。受影响社区适应生态移徙、粮食和水不安全以及卫生服务压力的能力将取决于对强有力的初级卫生系统和社会稳定的积极投资。开放获取出版由新南威尔士大学促进,作为澳大利亚大学图书馆员理事会Wiley -新南威尔士大学协议的一部分。Kelvin Kong是2025年NAIDOC周MJA特刊的客座编辑,他没有参与本文的任何编辑决策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Climate and environmental crisis: effects on ear and hearing health in Australia and for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples

Climate and environmental crisis: effects on ear and hearing health in Australia and for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples

As a collaborative research team, we acknowledge the diverse perspectives, lived experiences, and cultural knowledges that shape our work. We are united in our commitment to examining health and climate through the lens of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, recognising the profound and disproportionate impacts these intersecting issues have on Indigenous communities globally.

Our team includes Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander researchers, clinicians and allies who bring deep cultural, professional and personal insights to this work. Professor Kelvin Kong AM, a Worimi man and Australia's first Indigenous ear, nose and throat surgeon, has dedicated his career to addressing health inequities, particularly in ear health, guided by cultural values and respect for community leadership. Dr Georgia Tongs, a Wiradjuri woman and emerging researcher, contributes her passion for Indigenous-led health research, strengthened by mentorship and collaboration within the team.

Non-Indigenous team members — Associate Professor Robert Eisenberg, Professor Jennifer Martin, and Dr Isabella Ludbrook — bring their expertise in surgery, public health, climate advocacy, and infectious diseases, while actively engaging in culturally safe, Indigenous-led research practices. Their work is informed by long-standing partnerships with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, guided by principles of self-determination, reciprocity and respect.

This research is grounded with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community priorities driving its direction. The project emerged from discussions at the Otitis Media Australia (OMOZ) conference (www.omoz.com.au), where Indigenous health leaders highlighted the urgent need to address otitis media — a condition disproportionately affecting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children — alongside the growing threats of climate change.

We recognise that climate change is not just an environmental issue but a critical health justice issue for First Nations peoples, who face systemic inequities compounded by ecological disruption. Our collective approach centres Indigenous knowledge, resilience, and leadership in developing solutions that promote health equity and climate resilience.

Through this work, we strive to amplify Indigenous voices, uphold cultural authority, and contribute to a future where health and climate policies are shaped by the wisdom and needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities.

We acknowledge the Consolidated criteria for strengthening the reporting of health research involving Indigenous Peoples (CONSIDER) statement1 and have outlined how each principle was addressed during the research process (Supporting Information).

Otitis media, which is a bacterial infection of the middle ear, is at risk of becoming more prevalent with the progression of climate change. The condition already occurs more frequently in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (henceforth First Nations) populations who are disproportionately affected by climate change.2 Pathogenesis is thought to be influenced by changes in air and water quality and exacerbated by flourishing new organisms and worsening antimicrobial resistance. Prevention and early detection of disease can be disrupted by social instability resulting from environmental changes.3

Otitis media globally affects over 80% of children under the age of three years.4 It has the potential to cause life-threatening complications if infection spreads to the bone or brain, but it is more commonly associated with temporary or long term hearing loss. Untreated, paediatric hearing loss is associated with delays in speech and language development, poorer educational outcomes, higher adulthood unemployment, and increased contact with the criminal justice system.3 Given its profound and enduring impacts, paediatric hearing loss is a developmental emergency.

Hearing and language are particularly important in First Nations communities, as knowledge sharing is often done through oral storytelling. The rate of Australian First Nations children diagnosed with otitis media varies greatly with age group and geographical location, but it is generally accepted to be among the highest globally — well over the 4% disease prevalence classifying a major public health concern.3, 5-7 In remote areas, the cohort prevalence for children under five years of age has been recorded up to 90%, and even in urban areas, First Nations children experience a burden of disease three times that of non-First Nations children.3 Disease may manifest within weeks of birth and is often insidious. Structural barriers to health care access and systemic racism and stigma result in delayed diagnosis and more late-stage or chronic complications for First Nations populations compared with non-Indigenous Australians.3

Climate change, which is defined as the long term change in average weather patterns, has been identified by the World Health Organization as the single biggest health threat facing humanity.8 This is due to its many impacts on the physical, environmental and social systems in which individuals are born, live, grow, eat, and work. Although there are unique regional hazards and differing levels of vulnerability to such hazards, expected trends as the climate changes include increased temperature extremes, changes in precipitation patterns, poorer air quality, and more frequent extreme weather events.8

The health effects of climate change can be direct, such as heat-related illness and traumatic injury from extreme weather events, or indirect, including through food and water insecurity, overwhelmed health resources, and increased opportunities for spread of vector- and water-borne diseases.8, 9 Strategies to combat these issues involve mitigation, aiming to slow the process of climate change, and adaptation of health systems to a new climate.10

Prevention and early detection of otitis media are closely linked with addressing modifiable risk factors such as nutrition and housing density.3 These social determinants of health reflect broader societal inequities and are inherently tied to our environment, including climate.8 This perspective article addresses how direct and indirect risk factors for otitis media are likely to be affected by climate change and outlines the importance of climate change mitigation and adaption to reduce the burden of ear disease on First Nations children.

Populations at greater risk of climate change-related health issues, as identified by the Australian Government, include children, people of low socio-economic status, geographically isolated communities, and First Nations peoples.11 Rural and remote communities with a high proportion of First Nations residents are therefore likely to be facing substantially disproportionate effects of climate change.2, 12, 13

There is an intrinsic relationship between the wellbeing of the land, the community and the individual in First Nations culture.13 First Nations peoples have already adapted to tens of thousands of years of changing climate in Australia.14 Conversely, colonial perspectives of land ownership (rather than custodianship) have resulted in significant physical, emotional and spiritual harm relating to climate change. Extreme weather events such as bushfires and floods may result in damage to important sacred sites, homes and livelihoods.13 Eco-migration of First Nations communities from Country can be expected as land is exposed to climate extremes of heatwaves, rising sea levels, and drought. Existing social inequities driven by systemic racism may hinder capacity for communities to adapt to these changes.8

A 2024 systematic mapping review of 48 Australian studies on climate change health interventions identified studies involving priority populations, including First Nations people.15 Surprisingly, no studies were conducted in Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHOs). The literature addressed general health outcome consequences, rather than specific mitigation or adaptation solutions.15

Emerging evidence suggests that climate change may directly affect the prevalence of otitis media through pathological susceptibility to changes in temperature, humidity, and air and water quality. The indirect effects of climate change exacerbate existing societal inequities such as food and water insecurity, barriers to health care access, and housing instability. It is theorised that the impact of otitis media may be compounded by decreased access to services from extreme weather events, poor nutrition following reduction in local food yields and increased cost of living, oversaturation of health services, domestic overcrowding, aggravation of comorbid chronic disease, and geographical isolation.9

Climate change is not solely an environmental issue, but a health issue affecting highly specific body systems and with disproportional effects on priority populations. Otitis media is just one example of a common and serious childhood illness with economic, social and environmental risk factors on track to escalate with the effects of climate change. First Nations leadership can help mitigate climate change by shifting the dominant culture to a view of land custodianship rather than ownership. The capacity of affected communities to adapt to eco-migration, food and water insecurity, and health service stress will depend on proactive investment in strong primary health systems and social stability.

Open access publishing facilitated by University of New South Wales, as part of the Wiley - University of New South Wales agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians.

Kelvin Kong is a Guest Editor for the 2025 NAIDOC Week MJA Special Issue and was not involved in any editorial decision making about this article.

Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

Tongs G: Formal analysis, investigation, methodology, resources, visualization, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing. Ludbrook I: Conceptualization, formal analysis, methodology, project administration, resources, supervision, visualization, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing. Martin J: Conceptualization, formal analysis, methodology, project administration, supervision, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing. Eisenberg R: Conceptualization, data curation, formal analysis, investigation, methodology, project administration, supervision, visualization, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing. Kong K: Conceptualization, formal analysis, investigation, methodology, resources, supervision, writing – original draft, writing – review and editing.

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来源期刊
Medical Journal of Australia
Medical Journal of Australia 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
5.30%
发文量
410
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Medical Journal of Australia (MJA) stands as Australia's foremost general medical journal, leading the dissemination of high-quality research and commentary to shape health policy and influence medical practices within the country. Under the leadership of Professor Virginia Barbour, the expert editorial team at MJA is dedicated to providing authors with a constructive and collaborative peer-review and publication process. Established in 1914, the MJA has evolved into a modern journal that upholds its founding values, maintaining a commitment to supporting the medical profession by delivering high-quality and pertinent information essential to medical practice.
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