Link: https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/climate-changefueling-disasters-disease-in-potentially-irreversible-ways-reportwarns/2017/10/30/4f450ac4-bdaf-11e7-959cfe2b598d8c00_story.html?utm_term=.a4fa0573e3f2 Please see link above for original article, embedded hotlinks and comments.
Climate change fueling disasters, disease in ‘potentially irreversible’ ways, report warns By Ben Guarino and Brady Dennis October 30, 2017
Climate change significantly imperils public health globally, according to a new report that chronicles the many hazards and symptoms already being seen. The authors describe its manifestations as “unequivocal and potentially irreversible.” Heat waves are striking more people, disease-carrying mosquitoes are spreading and weather disasters are becoming more common, the authors note in the report published Monday by the British medical journal the Lancet. Climate change is a “threat multiplier,” they write, and its blows hit hardest in the most vulnerable communities, where people are suffering from poverty, water scarcity, inadequate housing or other crises. “We’ve been quite shocked and surprised by some of the results,” said Nick Watts, a fellow at University College London’s Institute for Global Health and executive director of the Lancet Countdown, a project aimed at examining the links between climate change and public health. The effort involved 63 researchers from two dozen institutions worldwide, including climate scientists as well as ecologists, geographers, economists, engineers, mathematicians, political scientists and experts who study food, transportation and energy. The amount of carbon dioxide in the earth's atmosphere in 2016 hit a record level, the United Nations said on Oct. 30. (Reuters) It is the latest in several Lancet reports to focus on climate change. In 2009, a Lancet commission described climate change as “the biggest global health threat of the 21st century.” In 2015, a second commission recognized that the innovations required to match this threat represented “the greatest global health opportunity of the 21st century.” The Countdown, as its ticking-clock title suggests, outlines the way humans are adapting — or not — to a rapidly evolving climate. It was announced last year during the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Morocco. The project, a synthesis of scientific literature and 1