UN sounds warning on climate change health threat
Published: 05:11 PM,Nov 02,2023 | EDITED : 09:11 PM,Nov 02,2023
Geneva: Climate change poses a health threat through increasing weather disasters and extreme heat, the UN said on Thursday, calling for better warning systems that could be weaved into public health policy.
'Climate change threatens to reverse decades of progress towards better health and well-being, particularly in the most vulnerable communities,' the United Nations' World Meteorological Organization said.
The WMO said climate information was not sufficiently integrated into health service planning.
'Scientific know-how and resources can help redress the balance, but are not sufficiently accessible or utilised,' it said.
The WMO's annual State of Climate Services report said tailored climate information was needed to support the health sector to tackle more extreme weather and poor air quality, shifting infectious disease patterns and food and water insecurity.
The WMO said abnormally high heat causes the greatest mortality of all extreme weather but health decision makers in only half of the countries affected can access warning services.
Between 2000 and 2019, the estimated deaths due to heat were approximately 489,000 per year, it said, adding: 'the impacts are underestimated as heat-related mortality could be 30 times higher than what is currently recorded'.
WMO chief Petteri Taalas struck a more sombre note.
'Practically the whole planet has experienced heatwaves this year,' he said.
'The onset of El Nino in 2023 will greatly increase the likelihood of breaking temperature records further, triggering more extreme heat in many parts of the world and in the ocean.'
Taalas said closer collaboration would boost the impact of climate science and health services so the health sector gets support 'at a time when unprecedented changes to our climate are having an increasing impact'.
Less than a quarter of health ministries have a health surveillance system which uses weather information to monitor climate-sensitive health risks.
Countries with limited early warning coverage have disaster mortality which is eight times higher than countries with substantial to comprehensive coverage, according to the WMO report.
And the number of medium- or large-scale disaster events 'is projected to reach 560 a year -- or 1.5 each day -- by 2030', the agency said.
The report highlighted the usefulness of early warning systems for extreme heat, pollen monitoring and satellite surveillance for climate-sensitive diseases.
'The climate crisis is a health crisis, driving more severe and unpredictable weather events, fuelling disease outbreaks, and contributing to higher rates of non-communicable diseases,' said World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
'By working together to make high-quality climate services more accessible to the health sector, we can help to protect the health and well-being of people facing the perils of climate change.'
The report said far more hydrometeorological investments needed to be designed to support health outcomes.
'In the wake of the global Covid-19 pandemic, all countries have experienced the social and economic losses and damages which can occur when the health of society is compromised,' the WMO said.
'More must be done to prepare the health community for future shocks and pressures they may experience due to climate variability and the damaging effects of climate change.' — AFP
'Climate change threatens to reverse decades of progress towards better health and well-being, particularly in the most vulnerable communities,' the United Nations' World Meteorological Organization said.
The WMO said climate information was not sufficiently integrated into health service planning.
'Scientific know-how and resources can help redress the balance, but are not sufficiently accessible or utilised,' it said.
The WMO's annual State of Climate Services report said tailored climate information was needed to support the health sector to tackle more extreme weather and poor air quality, shifting infectious disease patterns and food and water insecurity.
The WMO said abnormally high heat causes the greatest mortality of all extreme weather but health decision makers in only half of the countries affected can access warning services.
Between 2000 and 2019, the estimated deaths due to heat were approximately 489,000 per year, it said, adding: 'the impacts are underestimated as heat-related mortality could be 30 times higher than what is currently recorded'.
WMO chief Petteri Taalas struck a more sombre note.
'Practically the whole planet has experienced heatwaves this year,' he said.
'The onset of El Nino in 2023 will greatly increase the likelihood of breaking temperature records further, triggering more extreme heat in many parts of the world and in the ocean.'
Taalas said closer collaboration would boost the impact of climate science and health services so the health sector gets support 'at a time when unprecedented changes to our climate are having an increasing impact'.
Less than a quarter of health ministries have a health surveillance system which uses weather information to monitor climate-sensitive health risks.
Countries with limited early warning coverage have disaster mortality which is eight times higher than countries with substantial to comprehensive coverage, according to the WMO report.
And the number of medium- or large-scale disaster events 'is projected to reach 560 a year -- or 1.5 each day -- by 2030', the agency said.
The report highlighted the usefulness of early warning systems for extreme heat, pollen monitoring and satellite surveillance for climate-sensitive diseases.
'The climate crisis is a health crisis, driving more severe and unpredictable weather events, fuelling disease outbreaks, and contributing to higher rates of non-communicable diseases,' said World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
'By working together to make high-quality climate services more accessible to the health sector, we can help to protect the health and well-being of people facing the perils of climate change.'
The report said far more hydrometeorological investments needed to be designed to support health outcomes.
'In the wake of the global Covid-19 pandemic, all countries have experienced the social and economic losses and damages which can occur when the health of society is compromised,' the WMO said.
'More must be done to prepare the health community for future shocks and pressures they may experience due to climate variability and the damaging effects of climate change.' — AFP