American College of Lifestyle Medicine, Amherst, MASS, USA.
British Columbia Ministry of Energy, Mines and Low Carbon Innovation, Courtenay, British Columbia, Canada.
Ann Med. 2024 Dec;56(1):2411601. doi: 10.1080/07853890.2024.2411601. Epub 2024 Oct 11.
The small island nations, territories, and states dotting the Pacific are among the most disproportionately affected populations worldwide in the face of climate change. Sea level rise coupled with increased tropical storms contribute to seawater incursion, flooding, personal injury, trauma, and death. They face an existential threat due to the consequences of global warming, specifically ice melt resulting in sea level rise, repercussions for which they are not historically culpable. Along with these environmental threats, Pacific Island communities are further burdened with high rates of adverse health conditions such as diabetes and obesity yet have limited healthcare resources due to minimal economic development. The Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) has one of the highest amputation rates worldwide due to advanced diabetes from lifestyle factors, limited healthcare infrastructure, financial disparities, and a culturally based hesitancy to seek medical attention, all of which lead to an increased incidence of diabetic complications. Challenges posed by non-communicable chronic diseases include diabetes and infectious diseases like tuberculosis, hepatitis, malaria, and Zika. Just as crucial to the narrative of the Marshallese people is a fundamental indigenous knowledge of their surroundings and an inseparable relationship to the environment, aquatic animals, and communities around them, denoting a holistic living system. Though the outlook is precarious, solutions centering on lifestyle interventions that are informed by Indigenous cultural strengths can provide a responsive framework and a ray of hope, offering potential solutions to these two. This short perspective highlights the RMI as a case study of the challenges the Pacific Island nations bear, from a legacy of annexation to the modern threat of climate change, compounded by health disparities.
散布在太平洋上的小岛国、领土和州是全球受气候变化影响最不成比例的人群之一。海平面上升加上热带风暴的增加导致海水入侵、洪水、人身伤害、创伤和死亡。由于全球变暖的后果,特别是冰融化导致海平面上升,他们面临着生存威胁,而他们在历史上并没有对此负责。除了这些环境威胁,太平洋岛屿社区还面临着高比例的不良健康状况,如糖尿病和肥胖症,由于经济发展有限,他们的医疗资源有限。马绍尔群岛共和国(RMI)由于生活方式因素导致的糖尿病、有限的医疗基础设施、经济差距以及基于文化的对医疗的回避,导致全球截肢率最高之一,从而导致糖尿病并发症的发病率增加。非传染性慢性疾病带来的挑战包括糖尿病和传染病,如结核病、肝炎、疟疾和寨卡病毒。同样对马绍尔群岛人民的叙述至关重要的是他们对周围环境的基本土著知识以及与环境、水生动物和周围社区不可分割的关系,这标志着一个整体的生活系统。尽管前景不稳定,但以土著文化优势为基础的生活方式干预措施为中心的解决方案可以提供一个响应框架和一线希望,为这两个问题提供潜在的解决方案。这篇简短的观点强调了 RMI 作为太平洋岛国所面临的挑战的案例研究,从被吞并的历史到气候变化的现代威胁,再加上健康差距。