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→ Contents list for this issue
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Global warming and resultant climate change pose serious risks to human health.1-3 However, global warming is only one of a nested series of threats to the health — and even survival — of humankind. With this in mind, is our current approach to both clinical and public health sufficient?
Parallel threats to the health and wellbeing of humanity arise from a myriad of anthropogenic problems (Box). All such problems, acting synergistically, stress the ecological and social foundations upon which humanity relies for air to breathe, water to drink, food to eat, and disposal of waste, and without which there can be no civilisation and no economy. Taken together, they comprise what has been described as global environmental change (GEC).4
There are many drivers of GEC. Our complex society is heavily dependent on oil to function, even though the supply of easily recoverable oil has peaked or is about to peak.5 However, the fossil fuel bonanza over the past century and a half has enabled a human population explosion that, in turn, has been driving GEC.
As populations expand and encroach into new areas, destroying natural habitats and putting animals and humans into close proximity, humans are being increasingly exposed to novel animal diseases. HIV and emerging diseases such as Ebola virus, severe acute respiratory syndrome and H5N1 avian influenza may be manifestations of this.6
The rising population, ecological stress, and neoliberal-driven economic disparity all contribute to political unrest and human violence,7,8 which drive further GEC.
Consequently, humanity is facing a series of serious, unprecedented ecological and social changes caused by ourselves. Of these, it is global warming that, if not the most dangerous threat, is the fulcrum about which to coordinate analysis and action.
To express concern about the survival of humankind is not being alarmist. Our understanding of the threats facing humanity has moved to a point where the full range of possibilities confronting us can be appreciated. Where we end up consequent to GEC in the next two centuries will be somewhere on a continuum that extends from the extinction of Homo sapiens, through collapse or patchy disintegration of complex industrialised society, to a sustainable industrial civilisation. Exactly where we find ourselves on this continuum depends on how quickly and effectively we act environmentally, economically and socially. Our survival also depends on our ability to control weapons of mass destruction, which are more likely to be used as the consequences of GEC generate conflict over access to ever scarcer resources.
As health carers, we are involved on several levels. Individually, we are both part of the cause of GEC and recipients of its effects. As health care professionals, we will need to modify both our health systems and the way we practise to meet the challenge of new health problems, and to adapt to old health problems in new guises. As health professionals, we also have a duty of care to our patients to strongly advocate for action.
Serendipitously, GEC also presents unique opportunities. GEC and economic inequity have related causes. Thus, a strategic approach would enable humanity to derive a set of solutions that will make the world both environmentally sustainable and more economically just,7 with flow-on benefits for health. Indeed, Jonathan Patz proposed that “global climate change could be the greatest public health opportunity we’ve had in over a century”.9 Changes needed to mitigate and adapt to GEC present specific health opportunities; for instance, less car use means more exercise. Howard Frumkin has explained how redesigning cities and rearranging traditional work practices can enhance exercise, build social capital, and make a healthier society.10
While beneficial, such changes are not in themselves sufficient. GEC is adversely affecting our society and will continue to do so. The medical community can no longer limit its focus to hospital waiting times, fee levels, workforce shortages, obesity and diabetes. These issues all become starkly irrelevant if the ecological and social systems on which we depend for both our survival and our capacity to deliver services, save lives and care for people stop working. We need a profound shift in our paradigm.
The health care sector is not only responsible for delivering health care, but must also ensure the environmental and social bases for health itself. To meet this responsibility, we can act personally — buy a hybrid car, for instance. Individually, we can join and financially support organisations that are working for change: Doctors for the Environment Australia, the Medical Association for Prevention of War, the Australian Conservation Foundation, and others. But collectively, our academic colleges and professional associations must advocate strongly and clearly to government about the gravity of our predicament and the need for urgent, wide-ranging action.
Humanity needs a new vision for health for the year 2100: to make sure we have an economically equitable society on an ecologically healthy planet. The stakes are high — we must not fail. The challenge I put to all of us and to our health and political leaders is to work together to make this vision a reality.
Serious current environmental problems*
Destruction/loss of natural resources
natural habitat (ecosystem services)
wild food sources
biological diversity
soil (erosion, salinity, fertility)
Ceilings on natural resources (soft ceiling, raising the ceiling costs)
Harmful things made or moved around
toxic chemicals
alien species
atmospheric gases (greenhouse gases → climate change, ozone destruction)
* Derived from Diamond J. Chapter 16. In: Collapse: how societies choose to fail or survive. London: Allen Lane, 2005.
Public Health Association of Australia, Canberra, ACT.
Correspondence: aspetertATbigpond.com
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©The Medical Journal of Australia 2008 www.mja.com.au PRINT ISSN: 0025-729X ONLINE ISSN: 1326-5377