Machalaba Catherine, Romanelli Cristina, Stoett Peter, Baum Sarah E, Bouley Timothy A, Daszak Peter, Karesh William B
EcoHealth Alliance, New York, NY; Future Earth ecoHEALTH project, New York, NY; City University of New York School of Public Health, New York, NY.
Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, Montreal, Canada.
Ann Glob Health. 2015 May-Jun;81(3):445-58. doi: 10.1016/j.aogh.2015.08.002.
Climate change has myriad implications for the health of humans, our ecosystems, and the ecological processes that sustain them. Projections of rising greenhouse gas emissions suggest increasing direct and indirect burden of infectious and noninfectious disease, effects on food and water security, and other societal disruptions. As the effects of climate change cannot be isolated from social and ecological determinants of disease that will mitigate or exacerbate forecasted health outcomes, multidisciplinary collaboration is critically needed.
The aim of this article was to review the links between climate change and its upstream drivers (ie, processes leading to greenhouse gas emissions) and health outcomes, and identify existing opportunities to leverage more integrated global health and climate actions to prevent, prepare for, and respond to anthropogenic pressures.
We conducted a literature review of current and projected health outcomes associated with climate change, drawing on findings and our collective expertise to review opportunities for adaptation and mitigation across disciplines.
Health outcomes related to climate change affect a wide range of stakeholders, providing ready collaborative opportunities for interventions, which can be differentiated by addressing the upstream drivers leading to climate change or the downstream effects of climate change itself.
Although health professionals are challenged with risks from climate change and its drivers, the adverse health outcomes cannot be resolved by the public health community alone. A phase change in global health is needed to move from a passive responder in partnership with other societal sectors to drive innovative alternatives. It is essential for global health to step outside of its traditional boundaries to engage with other stakeholders to develop policy and practical solutions to mitigate disease burden of climate change and its drivers; this will also yield compound benefits that help address other health, environmental, and societal challenges.
气候变化对人类健康、我们的生态系统以及维持这些系统的生态过程有着无数影响。温室气体排放上升的预测表明,传染病和非传染病的直接和间接负担将增加,对粮食和水安全产生影响,并引发其他社会混乱。由于气候变化的影响无法与疾病的社会和生态决定因素相分离,这些因素会减轻或加剧预测的健康结果,因此迫切需要多学科合作。
本文的目的是回顾气候变化与其上游驱动因素(即导致温室气体排放的过程)和健康结果之间的联系,并确定现有机会,以利用更综合的全球健康和气候行动来预防、应对人为压力并做好准备。
我们对与气候变化相关的当前和预测的健康结果进行了文献综述,借鉴研究结果和我们的集体专业知识,回顾各学科的适应和缓解机会。
与气候变化相关的健康结果影响广泛的利益相关者,为干预措施提供了现成的合作机会,这些干预措施可通过应对导致气候变化的上游驱动因素或气候变化本身的下游影响来加以区分。
尽管卫生专业人员面临气候变化及其驱动因素带来的风险,但仅靠公共卫生界无法解决不利的健康结果。全球健康需要发生阶段性变化,从与其他社会部门合作的被动应对者转变为推动创新替代方案的主动参与者。全球健康必须超越其传统界限,与其他利益相关者合作,制定政策和切实可行的解决方案,以减轻气候变化及其驱动因素造成的疾病负担;这还将产生复合效益,有助于应对其他健康、环境和社会挑战。