In a series of articles presented by the World Health Organization (WHO), documented scientific evidence highlighted the harmful impact of climate change upon the significant stages of the human life cycle.
โThese provide important scientific evidence on how the health of pregnant women, newborns, children, adolescents and older people is affected by air pollution and different climate hazards, including wildfires, flooding and extreme heat,โ Anayda Portela, director of the WHOโs department of maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health and aging, said during a briefing Friday in Geneva for journalists, reportedย VOA.
She added: โThis evidence is critically important, because it shows the leading health risks for each of these groups for these different climate events.โ
Climate-related health risks โhave been crucially underestimatedโ for younger and older people and during pregnancy, โwith serious, often life-threatening implicationsโ, showed the collection of articles published in theย Journal of Global Health, she noted.
As per the studiesโ finding, climate-related natural hazards have some โserious mental and physical health impactsโ in pregnancy, and for younger and older people.
For example, preterm births, which now are the leading cause of childhood deaths, โincrease during heatwaves, whereas, older people are more likely to suffer heart attacks or respiratory distressโ, noted the authors.
Heatwaves also โaffect cognitive function and therefore learning for children and adolescentsโ, they reported.
Moreover, 2023 as the hottest year on record has been confirmed by the World Meteorological Organizationโs State of Global Climate report. They also predict that global temperatures over โthe entire five-year 2024-2028 period will exceed 1.5 degrees centigrade above the pre-industrial era,โ which scientists warn could lead to instantaneous and unchangeable changes in the climate.