Climate Change: 2000
Publications
Author: Last,
J., Patz, J., and Engelberg, D.
Title: The effects of changing weather on public
health.
Publication: Annual Review of Public Health
21(1), 2000.
© Annual Reviews, Inc.
Notes : Many
diseases are influenced by weather conditions or display strong
seasonality, suggestive of a possible climatic contribution.
Projections of future climate change have, therefore, compelled
health scientists to re-examine weather/disease relationships.
There are three projected physical consequences of climate change:
temperature rise, sea level rise, and extremes in the hydrologic
cycle. This century the earth has warmed by about 0.5 degrees
centigrade, and the mid-range estimates of future temperature
change and sea level rise are 2.0 degrees centigrade and 49
centimeters, respectively, by the year 2100. Extreme weather
variability associated with climate change may especially add an
important new stress to developing nations that are already
vulnerable as a result of environmental degradation, resource
depletion, overpopulation, or location (e.g. low-lying coastal
deltas). The regional impacts of climate change will vary widely
depending on existing population vulnerability. Health outcomes of
climate change can be grouped into those of: (a) direct physical
consequences, e.g. heat mortality or drowning; (b)
physical/chemical sequelae, e.g. atmospheric transport and
formation of air pollutants; (c) physical/biological consequences,
e.g. response of vector- and water-borne diseases, and food
production; and (d) socio-demographic impacts, e.g. climate or
environmentally induced migration or population dislocation.
Better understanding of the linkages between climate variability
as a determinant of disease will be important, among other key
factors, in constructing predictive models to guide public health
prevention.
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