New Report From Australian Researchers Concerned About The Planet, Places And People At Risk

Main Category: Public Health
Also Included In: Cardiovascular / Cardiology;  Tropical Diseases;  Respiratory / Asthma
Article Date: 30 Oct 2007 - 13:00 PDT

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Australians face increasingly large-scale health risks from our expanding impact on the natural environment, ranging from increases in weather extremes and dengue fever to obesity, diabetes and mental health.

Twelve of Australia's top health and medical researchers have contributed to a new report which concludes that rapid environmental and climatic changes pose increasing risks to the health of Australians.

Released by Research Australia, the 'Healthy Planet, Places and People' Report found that:

* Deaths from heart attacks, strokes and respiratory disease, from increases in heatwaves, could double or triple by 2050;

* Asthma -- already affecting 3 in 20 children and 1 in 10 adults -- is likely to increase in some groups;

* The incidence and geographic range of some mosquito-borne infectious diseases will increase;

* Food poisoning -- with 5.4 million cases reported each year -- is also likely to rise;

* Viral infections such as avian flu and SARS will spread more readily as population density, people movement, trade and land clearing increase.

Professor Tony McMichael of the Australian National University, who led the report and is part of the Nobel Prize winning UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, said that researchers are just beginning to recognise the health implications of a warmer planet.

"Our rapidly expanding impact on the natural environment is casting a huge shadow over the health of future generations," Prof McMichael said.

"It is not just a warmer planet and weather disasters -- climate change is one of many environmental changes. Our health is also endangered by depleted water flows, land degradation, disrupted ecosystems and acidified oceans. We need better understanding of these risks, and how to reduce them, through new research."

The report was commissioned by Research Australia to commemorate 'Thank You' Day (November 20, 2007), Australian's annual opportunity to send personal messages of thanks to medical researchers whose work is special to them via http://www.thankyouday.org/.

2007 Australian of the Year, Prof Tim Flannery said it is hardly surprising that human health will be strongly influenced by climate change.

"From water availability and quantity to temperature and food, our changing climate will influence all of the fundamentals of life," Prof Flannery said. Proudly supported by

"To ignore climate change in terms of human health would be a bit like treating the fish in a fishbowl, while refusing to change their ever more polluted water."

Prof McMichael said health and medical research has long been based on the premise that the natural world around us is essentially constant.

"Today, human actions are inadvertently impairing the working of the world. We need to understand more about how human-induced changes to climate and global environment are affecting, and will affect, our lives," Prof McMichael said.

The report was launched by Research Australia CEO, Rebecca James, who said the report's findings highlight the importance of health and medical research in helping Australians adapt to the changing environment.

"We are only beginning to recognise the health implications of a warmer planet. More research is needed to understand its full impact on our health, and how we can adapt," Ms James said.

"The potential health impacts of climate change are significant. Without the work of medical researchers to address health risks, the impact on our health, economy and society could be dramatic."

###

A full copy of the 'Healthy Planet, Places and People' Report can be downloaded from http://www.thankyouday.org/. From October 29 to November 20, you can also send your personal message of thanks to Australia's health and medical researchers via the website. MBF Australia and NHMRC are diamond sponsors of 'Thank You' Day.

Researchers from ANU, CSIRO, Queensland Institute of Medical Research, University of Western Australia, University of Western Sydney, Macquarie University, University of Adelaide, QUT, Monash University, Charles Darwin University and the University of Newcastle contributed to the Report and are available for interviews. Research Australia is a unique national not-for-profit alliance of more than 190 member and donor organisations with a common mission to make health and medical research a higher national priority. For more information on Research Australia visit http://www.researchaustralia.org/.

"Thank You" Day events are being held in Sydney (Oct 29), Canberra (Oct 31), Gold Coast (Nov 2), Townsville (Nov 5), Darwin (Nov 7), Hobart (Nov 8), Perth (Nov 12), Melb (Nov 14 & 20), Brisbane (Nov 15) and Adelaide (Nov 15).

Source: Julie Sheather
Research Australia

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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Julie Sheather. "New Report From Australian Researchers Concerned About The Planet, Places And People At Risk." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 30 Oct. 2007. Web.
16 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/87153.php>

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Julie Sheather. (2007, October 30). "New Report From Australian Researchers Concerned About The Planet, Places And People At Risk." Medical News Today. Retrieved from
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