Climate change's toll on global health increasingly getting attention

Heat waves that kill tens of thousands of people at once. Massive floods that not only destroy property but also spread typhoid and cholera. Mosquito-borne illnesses such as dengue fever and malaria, in areas that never saw such diseases before. A new pandemic far deadlier than COVID-19.

These are just a few of the dramatic potential health effects of unstoppable climate change — and not 50 years or a century from now, but possibly within the next decade.

Global summits routinely discuss the multifaceted dynamics of climate change — from the economic fallout of natural disasters to conflicts driven by precious resources — although the nexus between changing weather patterns and human health has not received as much attention. But the issue will be discussed at the upcoming World Economic Forum in Davos, a sign that policymakers are increasingly recognizing the growing body of evidence that climate change is already wreaking havoc on human health.

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