Lancet Study Warns of Global Health Crisis and 1 Billion Climate Refugees by 2050
Climate change could force a billion people from their homes by 2050, potentially triggering major health crises around the world, according to a new study.
The Lancet‘s annual Countdown report calls on governments to act quickly to fight pollution and other factors that have exacerbated climate change, leading to public health issues.
“We are only just beginning to feel the impacts of climate change,” said Professor Hugh Montgomery, co-chair of the Lancet Countdown, in an interview with the Independent. “Any small amount of resilience we may take for granted today will be stretched to breaking point sooner than we may imagine.
The report found that “migration driven by climate change has potentially severe impacts on mental and physical health, both directly and by disrupting essential health and social services.”
The research also found that more humans are being exposed to extreme heatwaves and air pollution and are more commonly at risk for mosquito-borne illnesses than in past decades, due to climate change.
More than one hundred million adults over the age of 65 have been exposed to dangerously hot conditions since the turn of the 21st century, while 71 percent of cities tracked by the World Health Organization have dangerous levels of air pollution.
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