Ewan C, Bryant E A, Calvert G D, Marthick J, Condon-Paoloni D
University of Wollongong, NSW.
Med J Aust. 1991 Apr 15;154(8):554-9.
To identify potential health effects of the greenhouse effect and ozone layer depletion in Australia.
Data were derived from a number of sources: (i) published articles accessed from relevant databases in the disciplines of health, public health and climatology over the past 20 years; (ii) published conference proceedings, review monographs and government reports covering the topic; (iii) a survey of experts in public health and climatology/geography (150 individuals were surveyed in the first phase with a 63% response rate); and (iv) a consensus conference in which 22 invited experts reviewed the results of the literature review and survey and a second conference in which 18 senior members of the health bureaucracy and public health profession considered the implications of the findings.
Over 200 published articles or monographs were reviewed. Criteria for selection were whether the papers contributed information to the objectives of the review.
Because of the nature of the problem under investigation, predictions based on reasonable scientific assumptions were the major content of the review rather than conclusions based on scientific research.
The major predicted health effects of long-term climatic change in Australia are skin and eye damage from increased ultraviolet radiation exposure, increased incidence of some respiratory diseases, vector-borne and water-borne diseases, and the social and physical effects of natural hazards and social and economic restructuring. The most vulnerable groups include the aged, the very young, the chronically ill, those living in poorly designed neighbourhoods and those working in outdoor occupations or heavy industry.
The potential effects on health of long-term climatic change cover the broad spectrum of public health concerns. Detailed predictions of likely problems in specific geographic areas are not yet possible, but progressive development of such predictive capability is a high priority. Doctors will have an increasingly important role in monitoring local health status and participating in disease prevention and surveillance programmes.
确定温室效应和臭氧层损耗对澳大利亚健康可能产生的影响。
数据来自多个渠道:(i)过去20年从健康、公共卫生和气候学领域相关数据库获取的已发表文章;(ii)涵盖该主题的已发表会议论文集、综述专著和政府报告;(iii)对公共卫生和气候学/地理学专家的一项调查(第一阶段调查了150人,回复率为63%);(iv)一次共识会议,22位受邀专家对文献综述和调查结果进行了评审,以及另一次会议,18位卫生部门高级官员和公共卫生专业人员审议了研究结果的影响。
对200多篇已发表的文章或专著进行了评审。选择标准是这些论文是否为综述目标提供了信息。
由于所调查问题的性质,基于合理科学假设的预测是综述的主要内容,而非基于科学研究的结论。
澳大利亚长期气候变化预测的主要健康影响包括紫外线辐射暴露增加导致的皮肤和眼睛损伤、一些呼吸道疾病、媒介传播和水传播疾病发病率上升,以及自然灾害和社会经济结构调整的社会和物理影响。最脆弱群体包括老年人、幼儿、慢性病患者、居住在设计不佳社区的人群以及从事户外工作或重工业的人员。
长期气候变化对健康的潜在影响涵盖了广泛的公共卫生问题。目前尚无法对特定地理区域可能出现的问题进行详细预测,但逐步发展这种预测能力是当务之急。医生在监测当地健康状况以及参与疾病预防和监测计划方面将发挥越来越重要的作用。