Publication | Closed Access
Emerging Threats to Human Health from Global Environmental Change
282
Citations
127
References
2009
Year
Ecosystem HealthEcological HealthNatural EnvironmentEnvironmental ImpactsGlobal HealthEnvironmental HealthEnvironmental EpidemiologyInternational HealthClimate Change VulnerabilityDisaster VulnerabilityPublic HealthClimate RiskGlobal Health ChallengePublic Health ThreatsPlanetary HealthClimate ChangeHuman Health
Large‑scale anthropogenic changes such as land‑use and climate change are accelerating, creating five major emerging public health threats—infectious disease, water scarcity, food scarcity, natural disasters, and population displacement—that together pose the greatest challenge humanity has faced. The study calls for a deeper understanding of the dynamics, vulnerable populations, and risk profiles of these threats to enable better modeling, policy decision‑making, and targeted aid allocation.
Large-scale anthropogenic changes to the natural environment, including land-use change, climate change, and the deterioration of ecosystem services, are all accelerating. These changes are interacting to generate five major emerging public health threats that endanger the health and well-being of hundreds of millions of people. These threats include increasing exposure to infectious disease, water scarcity, food scarcity, natural disasters, and population displacement. Taken together, they may represent the greatest public health challenge humanity has faced. There is an urgent need to improve our understanding of the dynamics of each of these threats: the complex interplay of factors that generate them, the characteristics of populations that make them particularly vulnerable, and the identification of which populations are at greatest risk from each of these threats. Such improved understanding would be the basis for stepped-up efforts at modeling and mapping global vulnerability to each of these threats. It would also help natural resource managers and policy makers to estimate the health impacts associated with their decisions and would allow aid organizations to target their resources more effectively.
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