MJA • Volume 191 Number 11/12 • 7/21 December 2009 595
EDITORIALS
The Medical Journal of Australia ISSN: 0025-
729X 7/21 December 2009 191 11/12 595-596
©The Medical Journal of Australia 2009
www.mja.com.au
Editorials
he United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copen-
hagen (7–18 December) will soon be behind us. Climate
change, however, continues to progress more rapidly and
disruptively than climate scientists foreshadowed only 5 years ago.
Recent peer-reviewed reports of climate change processes and
impacts show, among other effects, an increased rate of greenhouse
gas accumulation in the lower atmosphere, and an accelerating sea
level rise. This has prompted a worrying reappraisal of where we
might now be heading. Earlier this decade, there were hopes of
limiting the global temperature increase to about 2° C. There is
now growing scientific recognition that we need to prepare for
an even more disrupted world with temperature rises of up to
3–4° C.
1-3
Most political institutions have short-term priorities. These
impede the urgent, enlightened and unselfish collective action
needed to respond to this unprecedented global environmental
challenge.
3,4
Despite the rapid maturation of climate change
science and the wonders of global sensing technology and elec-
tronic connectivity, we collectively fail to understand the full
extent of the risks we face. Something fundamental is missing.
Preoccupation with the technical details of climate change science,
and with economic costs, property protection and the politics of
shared responsibility, has overshadowed full appreciation of the
consequences for human health and survival.
Despite the growing recognition of the risks posed by climate
change to social and economic wellbeing, the risks to human
health are mostly viewed as regrettable, and hopefully tolerable,
collateral damage. This view is very naïve. It fails to recognise the
profound significance of the risks posed to the biology and health
of plant and animal species everywhere, including our species.
Christmas joys aside, this situation signals a Red Alert. Climate
change is weakening Earth’s life-support systems, and, if not
reversed, portends a disastrous outcome.
This is no longer a matter of speculation or theoretical model-
ling. The number of people affected annually by heatwaves and
other extreme weather events has risen in several countries over
recent decades. For example, the average annual number of excess
deaths associated with heatwaves has increased markedly over the
past two decades in Hungary, commensurate with a threefold
increase in the average annual frequency of heatwaves.
5
Food
yields have recently decreased in some regions, including parts of
Asia, southern Africa and the eastern Sahelian region of Africa, in
association with a range of environmental stresses that include
warming, drying and severe flooding.
6
Some infectious diseases
have changed their geographic range and seasonal duration, in
association with regional warming. This includes northward exten-
sions in Sweden of tick-borne encephalitis and its tick vector, and
in China of the critical winter survival zone for water snails that
transmit schistosomiasis. Similarly, malaria has been occurring at
higher altitudes in highland regions in parts of eastern Africa.
7
Despite current evidence, such as the marked ecosystem
changes and accelerated ice losses in the Arctic, human-driven
climate change is still at an early stage; excessive greenhouse gas
emissions will continue for (at least) decades, and the full realisa-
tion of their effect on climate will be drawn out over time.
8
The
momentum of change in the climate system is huge and pro-
tracted, especially for sea level rise. Hence, most current climate
“mitigation” actions will have limited immediate effect, and further
delay and attenuation of emission reduction targets by govern-
ments will invite disaster. Adverse impacts on human health can
be expected to rise over coming decades — particularly in
vulnerable populations in low-income and poorly resourced coun-
tries, such as Bhutan and Nepal, and in geographically exposed
locations, such as river delta populations, and small island states,
and south-eastern Australia.
Meanwhile, the unequivocal detection of climate-related health
impacts at this early stage presents a research challenge. The health
effects of climate change coincide with various non-climate-related
causal factors — so, for example, an upwards trend in excess
deaths during heatwaves may also be due to population ageing and
a greater prevalence of underlying cardiovascular disease. Further,
human vulnerability (unlike that of all other species) is typically
cushioned by culture, technology, trade and aid. However, this
difference in vulnerability between Homo sapiens and other living
organisms is less than we might imagine. The natural environment,
the biosphere, furnishes all of Nature’s processes and the products
upon which our health and survival depend: food, fresh water and
fibre (including timber, firewood and cotton), natural constraints
on pathogens, access to natural medicines and a relatively stable
climate. These things, rather than hospitals, doctors, genetic
testing and dietary advice, are the true foundations of population
health.
Climate risks to health are both direct and indirect. Direct risks
include deaths and physical injury from extreme events, such as
increasingly frequent and intense bushfires, cyclones and floods;
and deaths and hospitalisations from extreme heat. Indirect risks
include changes in the range and seasonality of various infectious
diseases, and impaired food system productivity on both land and
sea, productivity in the latter being compounded by oceanic
acidification due to greater uptake of carbon dioxide. Mental and
physical health problems can result from the social disruption and
dislocation caused by weather extremes that are bringing drought
and long-term regional drying out to parts of rural Australia. A
likely increase in the flow of climate refugees, here and elsewhere,
will also have consequences for health and health care systems.
Climate change will act primarily by amplifying and extending
the rates and ranges of existing health problems. Hence, to
minimise climate change impacts, it is crucial to reduce the high
background rates of poor health in vulnerable populations. Many
low-income countries are already struggling to meet the UN’s
Climate change and human health:
recognising the really inconvenient truth
Anthony J McMichael and Colin D Butler
T
Climate change is weakening Earth’s life-support systems