Doctors and Climate Change Links Between Climate Policy And Health Policy Must Not Be Overlooked
Doctors and Climate Change
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.70284/njirm.v1i4.110Keywords:
doctors, climet changeAbstract
In November 2010, representatives from countries around the world will meet in Cancún, Mexico, at the 2010 United Nations Climate Change Conference1. Here they will attempt to draft a treaty aimed at stabilising atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations at a level that will prevent catastrophic climate change. What a pity the meeting had not been scheduled in Pakistan. Then the anger of those whose livelihoods have been destroyed by the biblical floods that have washed away the hopes of a nation would surely have focused the delegates’ minds. Alternatively, the meeting could have been held in western Russia, where record high temperatures, wild fires, droughts, and crop failures have precipitated a state of emergency. The conference might even have been held in Mozambique, where rapidly rising wheat prices have caused rioting in the streets. All of these climatic events and their predictable human aftermath occurred this year and all are made more probable by climate change, the main cause of which is the increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, mostly from the burning of fossil fuels.
References
Conference in Cancun, 29 November-10
December 2010. http://unfccc.int/meetings/
cop_16/ items/5571.php.
2. 2 Ruiz-Arregui L, Castillo-MartÃnez L, Orea-
Tejeda A, MejÃa-Arango S, Miguel-Jaimes A.
Prevalence of self-reported overweight-obesity
and its association with socioeconomic and
health factors among older Mexican adults.
Salud Pública Méx 2007. www.scielosp.org
/scielo. php?script= sci_arttext & pid=S0036-
363420070010000073. Roberts I, Edwards P. The energy glut: the politics of fatness in an overheating world. Zed Books, 2010.
4. Goldsmith B. IBM finds world’s worst commutes. Toronto Sun 2010. www.torontosun.com/life/2010/06/30/14564796.html.
5. McMichael A, Woodruf R, Hales S. Climate change and human health: present and future risks. Lancet 2006;367:859-69.
6. Haines A, Wilkinson P, Tonne C, Roberts I. Aligning climate change and public health policies. Lancet 2009;374:2035-8.
7. Woodcock J, Edwards P, Tonne C, Armstrong BG, Ashiru O, Banister D, et al. Public health benefits of strategies to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions: urban land transport. Lancet 2009;374:1930-43.
8. Friel S, Dangour AD, Garnett T, Lock K, Chalabi Z, Roberts I, et al. Publichealth benefits of strategies to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions: ood and agriculture. Lancet 2009;374:2016-25.
9. Roberts I. The economics of tackling climate change. BMJ 2008;336:165-6.
10. Climate and Health Council. www.climateandhealth.org/.