[PDF][PDF] The 2022 report of the Lancet countdown on health and climate change: Health at the mercy of fossil fuels

L Countdown - 2022 - trepo.tuni.fi
L Countdown
2022trepo.tuni.fi
Executive summary The 2022 report of the Lancet Countdown is published as the world
confronts profound and concurrent systemic shocks. Countries and health systems continue
to contend with the health, social, and economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, while
Russia's invasion of Ukraine and a persistent fossil fuel overdependence has pushed the
world into global energy and cost-of-living crises. As these crises unfold, climate change
escalates unabated. Its worsening impacts are increasingly affecting the foundations of …
Executive Summary
The 2022 report of the Lancet Countdown is published as the world confronts profound and concurrent systemic shocks. Countries and health systems continue to contend with the health, social, and economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, while Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and a persistent fossil fuel overdependence has pushed the world into global energy and cost-of-living crises. As these crises unfold, climate change escalates unabated. Its worsening impacts are increasingly affecting the foundations of human health and wellbeing, exacerbating the vulnerability of the world’s populations to concurrent health threats.
During 2021 and 2022, extreme weather events caused devastation across every continent, adding further pressure to health services already grappling with the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. Floods in Australia, Brazil, China, western Europe, Malaysia, Pakistan, South Africa, and South Sudan caused thousands of deaths, displaced hundreds of thousands of people, and caused billions of dollars in economic losses. Wildfires caused devastation in Canada, the USA, Greece, Algeria, Italy, Spain, and Türkiye, and record temperatures were recorded in many countries, including Australia, Canada, India, Italy, Oman, Türkiye, Pakistan, and the UK. With advancements in the science of detection and attribution studies, the influence of climate change over many events has now been quantified. Because of the rapidly increasing temperatures, vulnerable populations (adults older than 65 years, and children younger than one year of age) were exposed to 3· 7 billion more heatwave days in 2021 than annually in 1986–2005 (indicator 1.1. 2), and heat-related deaths increased by 68% between 2000–04 and 2017–21 (indicator 1.1. 5), a death toll that was significantly exacerbated by the confluence of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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