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Global Warming and the Future of Healthcare

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Title: Global Warming and the Future of Healthcare


1
Global Warming and the Future of Healthcare
Nursing
  • Geoffrey Hunt BSc (Hons) MLitt PhD FIoN
  • Professor of Ethics Global Policies
  • University of Surrey, UK
  • g.hunt _at_surrey.ac.uk
  • The Mary Seacole Memorial Lecture
  • Royal College of Nursing Annual Congress 2007
  • Harrogate 18th April 2007

2
  • Sir David King, UK chief scientist,
  • calls climate change
  • "the biggest
  • danger
  • humanity has
  • faced in 5,000
  • years of
  • civilization."

Geoff Hunt 2007
Geoff Hunt 2007
3
Global warming effects
  • EFFECT
  • global annual average temperature has already
    risen by 0.6C since pre-industrial times, mostly
    due to human activities.
  • By 2100, average global temperatures are
    projected to rise by 2.0-2.5C (range 1.5-4.0C).
  • glaciers are retreating world wide
  • Spring plant development has advanced av. 5 days
  • Sea surface temperature rising
  • Coral reefs bleaching
  • Marine plankton affected impact on fish and
    birds
  • Sea levels are rising
  • Permafrost is melting in Alaska and Siberia
  • Collapse of the massive Larsen B ice shelf in
    Antarctica in 2002
  • Increasing prevalence of forest fires
  • Increasing prevalence severity of floods and
    droughts
  • HEALTH
  • The temperature change has been small over the
    last 150 years, but it has been enough to alter
    disease patterns across the globe.
  • The WHO has calculated that 150,000 lives are now
    being lost each year to climate change that has
    occurred since the 1970s.
  • Different kinds of impact Direct impacts
    (heat/cold) pathogen impacts environmental
    impacts social-economic impacts

Geoff Hunt 2007
4
Global warming cause
Burning of fossils fuels (coal, gas, oil) has
increased carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous
oxide gases in atmosphere and these retain
more heat of solar energy.
Geoff Hunt 2007
5
Pathogen-related impacts
  • The World Health Organization has identified
    more than 30 new or resurgent diseases in the
    last three decades, and changing patterns in
    distribution of
  • Malaria
  • West Nile Virus
  • Tick-Borne Encephalitis (TBE)
  • Dengue fever
  • Cholera
  • Lyme Disease
  • .and others

Geoff Hunt 2007
6
Malaria
  • Malaria now kills 3,000 African children a day -
    a dramatic increase from the 1950s and '60s, when
    control and containment seemed possible.
  • By the end 21st century, warming will enlarge the
    zone of potential malaria transmission from an
    area containing 45 of the worlds population to
    an area containing about 60. No vaccine is
    available, and the causative parasites are
    becoming resistant to standard drugs.
  • The geographic range of malaria is generally
    limited to the tropics and subtropics because the
    Plasmodium parasite requires an average
    temperature above 16C to develop.
  • Malaria moving northward and uphill. A WHO report
    in 2000 found that warming had caused malaria to
    spread from three districts in western Kenya to
    13 and led to epidemics of the disease in Rwanda
    and Tanzania.
  • Europe may be affected in future. Turkey is
    already danger zones for
  • malaria. The WHO says its likely to spread
    within eastern Europe, and
  • from there, possibly, to western areas.
  • NB The relationship between climate and
    malaria is complex and controversial.

Geoff Hunt 2007
7
West Nile Virus
  • Spreading fast West Nile virus (Uganda 1937),
    carried by mosquitoes, never seen in N America
    until 1999, has infected more than 21,000 people
    across the USA and Canada and killed more than
    800. Also spreading in Mexico, Puerto Rico, the
    Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Guadeloupe and El
    Salvador. Largely spread in bird infections, and
    animals such as horses and dogs.
  • Three degrees WNV has three different effects
    on humans, the 1st is an asymptomatic infection
    the 2nd is a mild febrile syndrome West Nile
    Fever
  • the 3rd is a neuroinvasive disease West Nile
    encephalitis. In infected individuals the ratio
    between the three states is roughly 110301.
  • Symptoms of WNV Fever Fever, headache, body
    ache, swollen lymph glands and occasionally a
    rash on the trunk. The elderly and those with
    compromised immune systems are more susceptible.
  • Symptoms of WNV EncephalitisHeadache, high
    fever, neck stiffness, stupor, disorientation,
    coma, tremors, convulsions, muscle weakness, and
    paralysis. Usually leave permanent neurological
    effects.
  • There is currently no vaccine for humans.

Geoff Hunt 2007
8
Tick-borne encephalitis (TBE)
Geoff Hunt 2007
  • In Sweden,
  • warmer winter days
  • have encouraged the northward movement of ticks,
    which has coincided with an increase in cases of
    tick-borne encephalitis since the 1980s.

In the last 25 years of the 20th C. the
prevalence of tick-borne encephalitis in Russia
and many European countries rose
enormously.10,000 cases p.a. in Russia.
 In 1996, health authorities reported a human
case of tick-borne encephalitis in the Czech
village of Borova Lada, elevation 3,000 feet.
Until then, the Ixodes rinicus tick (photo),
which is the carrier, had never been seen above
2,600 feet.
Long-lasting or permanent neuro- psychiatric
sequelae are observed in 10-20 of infected
patients.
9
Dengue fever
  • Dengue fever is now considered the most serious
    viral infection transmitted in man by insects,
    measured in terms of the number of human
    infections or the number of deaths.
  • Today Dengue afflicts an estimated 50m -100m in
    the tropics subtropics (mainly in urban areas).
    It has broadened its range in the Americas over
    the past 10 years and reached down to Buenos
    Aires by end of 1990s. Now found in
  • N Australia.
  • Asian Tiger Mosquitoes, which carry dengue
    fever, have been reported recently as far north
    as the Netherlands.

The incidence of dengue has increased in areas
where temperature has increased. Dengue fever
spreads to higher elevations. Dengue fever is
spreading above its former limit of 3,300 ft
(1,006 m) and has been reported above 4,000 ft
(1,219 m). In Mexico when dengue reached an
altitude of 1,700 meters during an unseasonably
warm summer in 1988. In an earlier study in
Mexico, the most important predictor of dengue
prevalence in communities was found to be the
median temperature during the rainy season.
Neither a vaccine nor a specific drug treatment
is yet available.
Geoff Hunt 2007
10
Estimated 2.5 billion people are currently at
risk from dengue, and since the late 1970s
Dengue has re-emerged in the Americas, with
280,000 reported cases reported in Latin America
in 1995 alone. Urban outbreaks can involve up to
70-80 of a population.
Geoff Hunt 2007
11
Cholera
  • Caused by Vibrio cholerae, a bacterium - severe
    diarrhea, and without rapid treatment often leads
    to dehydration and death.
  • As the seas warm Cholera, a waterborne disease,
    emerged in South America in 1991 for the first
    time in the 20th century. Facilitated by poverty
    and poor public health, it swept from Peru across
    the continent and into Mexico, killing more than
    10,000 people.
  • A study examined disease rates and climatic
    conditions, including rainfall, from 1966 to
    2002. The severity of cholera outbreaks
    corresponded to harsh conditions stimulated by El
    Niño, a weather pattern with global effects that
    stems from warming in the Pacific Ocean.
  • V. cholerae has been found to be associated with
    marine zooplankton, and blooms from warmer sea
    surface temperatures could expand this reservoir
    of cholera epidemics.
  • Increased floods and droughts will increase
    cholera outbreaks. (Droughts can wipe out
    supplies of safe drinking water and concentrate
    contaminants that might otherwise remain dilute.)

Geoff Hunt 2007
12
Lyme disease
  • Lyme disease (a Borrelia spirochete - photo) was
    not fully recognized until a cluster of cases was
    identified in the area of Lyme, southeastern
    Connecticut, USA in 1975, and has spread widely
    since then.
  • Carried by Ixodes tick.
  • Symptoms Rash, fever, headache etc.,
  • and very wide range of symptoms at late stage.
    Deaths have occurred but not common, but drain on
    healthcare resources.
  • A percentage of patients with Lyme disease
    have symptoms that last months to
  • years after treatment with antibiotics.
    These symptoms can include muscle and
  • joint pains, arthritis, cognitive
    defects, neurological complaints or fatigue.
  • Investigation is under way into connection
    with global warming.
  • The most common tick-borne disease in N
    America and Europe, and one
  • of the fastest-growing infectious
    diseases in the USA.
  • A GSK vaccine was taken off the market
    after only a few years
  • class action litigation followed
    side-effects.

Geoff Hunt 2007
13
Physical impacts
  • The cascading consequences of global warming
    include a rise in extreme weather events such as
  • heat waves and extreme cold
  • hurricanes
  • storms
  • river-floods
  • sea-flooding
  • droughts
  • soil erosion and desertification
  • landslides and mudslides

Geoff Hunt 2007
14
Non-pathogen health impacts
  • Besides the spread of pathogen-related disease
    we can expect big increases in
  • malnutrition
  • trauma
  • cardiac and respiratory illness
  • allergies and the like
  • Heat wave deaths, esp among elderly and very
    young In 2003, a record summer heat wave killed
    35,000 people, most of them elderly, in Western
    Europe. In France alone that year (the hottest
    3-month period recorded in France), there were an
    estimated 15,000 extra deaths.
  • A review of climate and weather disasters in the
    United States, from 1980, shows the top 2 killers
    were heat waves and associated drought, in 1980
    and 1988. Combined, at least 15,000 people died
    owing to hot and dry conditions those two years.

Geoff Hunt 2007
15
Non-pathogen health impacts -2
  • People with heart problems are vulnerable because
    their cardiovascular system must work harder to
    keep the body cool during hot weather. Heat
    exhaustion and some respiratory problems
    increase.
  • Higher air temperatures also increase the
    concentration of ozone at ground level. Ozone
    damages lung tissue, and causes particular
    problems for people with asthma and other lung
    diseases. 
  • Drought contributes to famines and disease
    outbreaks in less developed countries that kill
    millions.
  • Warmer temperatures combined with increased
    ambient UV radiation could worsen photochemical
    smog, especially over urban areas.
  • In other areas, cold-related deaths

Geoff Hunt 2007
16
Ecological Impacts
  • The disruption of ecological systems with..
  • the spread (and withdrawal) of pests and
    blights
  • rats and mice
  • ticks
  • flies
  • weevils
  • locusts
  • moulds
  • bacteria, etc.
  • an impact on food chains
  • interruption or dwindling of human food supplies

Geoff Hunt 2007
17
Ethical / legal aspects -1
  • Responsibility? Most affected will be developing
    nations, yet developed nations have contributed
    most to global warming. Therefore, the latter
    have greater responsibility.
  • Human migrations caused by climate disaster will
    stress hospitality and health resources of
    neighbouring nations and world community (Cf.
    Bangladesh)
  • Still, it will affect everyone on the planet
    regardless of class, race and culture if
    differentially
  • Economic, financial, industrial, transport,
    social and political systems (compounded by a
    coming oil demand crisis) will be put under
    severe strain. Migrations, refugees, conflicts
    and wars will almost certainly increase too.
  • A global problem requires a strategy of
    international dimensions that can translate into
    regional and local actions. (WHO Bulletin, 85(3)
    2007)
  • Shift needed in priorities for healthcare
    resources from high-tech curative to public and
    environmental health.

Geoff Hunt 2007
18
Ethical / Legal aspects -2
  • Stern Report No region would be left untouched
    by changes of this 3ºC inc. magnitude, though
    developing countries would be affected especially
    adversely. This applies particularly to the
    poorest people within the large populations of
    both sub-Saharan Africa, and South Asia. By 2100,
    in South Asia and Sub Saharan Africa, up to 145 -
    220 million additional people could fall below
    the 2-a-day poverty line, and every year an
    additional 165,000 - 250,000 children could die
    compared with a world without climate change.
    first page of Part II
  • Will there be equity in the adaptation to climate
    change what scale of compensation is required?
  • Tyndall Centre suggests principles for fair
    adaptation in the climate change regime include
    avoiding dangerous climate change,
    forward-looking responsibility, putting the most
    vulnerable first and equal participation of all.
  • Need for a global ethics Cf Mary Seacole, whose
    global ethics was greater than that of the
    authorities who would not support her going to
    Crimea war, but she funded herself.

Geoff Hunt 2007
19
Ethical / Legal aspects - 3
  • A taste of things to come
  • ..in Canada a 50 million class action lawsuit
    is being brought against the Ontario government
    on behalf of about 40 victims of West Nile Virus,
    claiming that the government did too little to
    inform the public about the risks (Canadian Lyme
    Disease Foundation (2006).

Geoff Hunt 2007
20
Official responses
  • Kyoto Protocol a pact agreed by government
  • delegates at a 1997 U.N. conference in Kyoto,
  • Japan, to reduce the amount of greenhouse
  • gases emitted by developed countries by
  • 5.2 of 1990 levels during 2008-2012.
  • A total of 141 nations have ratified it.
  • The World Health Organization has recognised the
    health impacts of climate change (WHO, 2006).
  • See WHO (2006) Climate Change and Health.
    http//www.who.int/globalchange/climate/en/
  • The Stern Review on the Economics of Climate
    Change (Cf. Tyndall Centre) has concluded that
    transition to a low-carbon (60 CO2) economy in
    UK by 2050 is possible. Note that energy
    efficiency measures would not only forestall
    future health harms of GW but would reduce
    current health harms by e.g. reducing harmful
    fine particle emissions of fossil fuels.
  • In the UK the Department of Environment convened
    an Expert Group on Climate Change and Health,
    which produced a comprehensive national report
    (DoE, 2001).

Geoff Hunt 2007
21
Example of official action
  • In Aug 2003 heat-related deaths in London among
    over-75s rose by 60.
  • See NHS Heat Wave Plan for England. During a
    Level 3 (Heatwave) alert
  • Primary care trusts and local social services
    authorities will
  • Continue to distribute advice to people at risk
    and managers and staff of care homes.
  • Commission additional care and support, involving
    at least daily contact, as necessary for at-risk
    individuals living at home. This may involve
    informal carers, volunteers and care workers. It
    will be particularly targeted at people with
    mobility or mental health problems, or receiving
    medication likely to give rise to heat-related
    risks, and those living in accommodation that
    cannot easily be kept cool. Informal carers
    should be consulted about additional arrangements
    wherever possible.
  • Ensure Department of Health advice reaches local
    authority-funded residential
  • and nursing care home managers as soon as a
    heatwave starts.
  • Primary care trusts and NHS trusts will ensure
    hospital services are in a state of
  • readiness in case there is a rise in admissions.
    Discharge planning should reflect
  • local and individual circumstances so that
    people at risk are not discharged to
  • unsuitable accommodation or reduced care during
    a heatwave.
  • (Thresholds for London are 32ºC in day and 18ºC
    at night).
  • Is this adequate? Is nursing policy-making
    involved?

Geoff Hunt 2007
22
Implications for Nursing
  • What general implications does global warming
    have on the global institution of nursing in next
    50 years?
  • Nursing resources will be severely stressed in
    many places where, how?
  • Impact on migration of nurses?
  • Unresponsive skill mixes?
  • All public sector finances put under strain?
  • Refugees and displaced people?
  • New disease patterns nursing response?

Geoff Hunt 2007
23
Professional Action
  • We must think and act now just to mitigate the
    coming disasters.
  • I recommend that nursing professional
    organizations, international, regional and
    national, do the following as a matter of
    urgency
  • 1) Support calls for adequately funded research
    on the public health and disease impacts of
    global warming.
  • 2) Research and draw up publicly available
    policy documents on the long term assessment of
    the impact of climate change on the need for
    nursing care and on the nursing profession.
  • 3) Urge governments, and international agencies
    to act now both to mitigate the impact of
    industrial and economic policy on the
    environment, and to prepare for the enormous
    impact of global warming on health.
  • 4) Urge all bodies involved in nurse education
    to put climate change and health on the
    curriculum, especially at the higher and CPD
    levels.
  • 5) Urge UK government to institute an adequate
    national severe weather event action team
    SWEAT for a healthcare response strategy to
    severe heat, cold, flood, epidemic etc. Cf.
    Civil Contingencies Act 2004

Geoff Hunt 2007
24
Personal actionreduce consumption
The Royal Society of Arts (London) in April 2005
(together with Canon) unveiled a 7m tall
sculpture called 'WEEE Man' on the South Bank. It
is made from 3.3 tonnes of electrical goods,
which is the average electrical waste one UK
person generates in their lifetime. The sculpture
was later taken on a UK tour.
Geoff Hunt 2007
25
Personal Action Life style changes reduce your
carbon footprint
  • Use less Fossil-fuel Energy
  • Use a Green energy supplier
  • Insulate home
  • Condenser boiler
  • Switch off electrical devices not in use
  • Turn down the water heating setting
  • Set the central heating timer accurately and at
    19ºC
  • Fill your dish washer / washing machine with a
    full load
  • Fill the kettle with only as much water as you
    need
  • Hang out the washing to dry rather than using a
    tumble-dryer
  • Wash dishes with as little hot water as possible,
    rather than in dishwasher
  • Change light bulbs to energy-saving bulbs (saving
    about 230kg C02/yr)

Transport Use public transport instead of a
car Walk or use a bicycle more If you buy a car
small or green one Do your weekly shopping in a
single trip Cut air travel use cyberspace
instead Campaign to Save forests Reduce
waste Recycle Join NGO campaigns asking banks
and corporations to change their energy
policies Support campaigns for national
legislation
Geoff Hunt 2007
Geoff Hunt 2007
26
References
  • Canadian Lyme Disease Foundation (2006) Victims
    launch 50 M lawsuit over West Nile.
    http//www.canlyme.com/wnvaction.html
  • Civil Contingencies Act 2004 http//www.opsi.gov.
    uk/acts/acts2004/20040036.htm
  • Davis, R.E., et al., 2003. Changing heat-related
    mortality in the United States. Environmental
    Health Perspectives, 14, 1712-1718.
  • Diarmid Campbell-Lendrum,a Carlos Corvalan a
    Maria Neiraa. (2007) Global climate change
    implications for international public health
    policy. Bulletin of World Health Organization,
    85 (3) 235-37.
  • DoE (2001) Health Effects of Climate Change in
    the UK.
  • http//www.dh.gov.uk/assetRoot/04/10/80/61/041080
    61.pdf
  • Epstein, P. 1999. Global Warming Health and
    Disease. World Wildlife Fund.
  • Houghton, J. Global Warming The Complete
    Briefing. Cambridge University Press, 3rd edn.,
    2004.
  • Khasnis A, Nettleman M.(2005) Global warming and
    infectious disease. Arch Med Res 36 (6) 689-96.
  • Reiter, P., Thomas, C J., Atkinson, P M et al.
    (2004) Reflection Reaction Global warming and
    malaria a call for accuracy, The Lancet
    Infectious Diseases Vol 4 323-24.
  • Lindgren, E. (1998) Climate and tickborne
    encephalitis. Conservation Ecology online
    2(1) 5. Available from the Internet. URL
    http//www.consecol.org/vol2/iss1/art5/
  • NHS (2004). Heatwave Plan for England. NHS,
    London. See www.dh.gov.uk/publications.
  • Ochoa, G., Hoffman, J Tin, T. Climate. Rodale
    International Ltd, London, 2005.
  • Patz, J. A., Campbell-Lendrum, D., Holloway, T.
    and Foley, J. A. (2005) Impact of regional
    climate change on human health. Nature 438,
    310-317.
  • Patz, J. A. Climate Change and Health Need for
    Expanded Scope of Occupational and Environmental
    Medicine. Available at
  • http//yosemite.epa.gov/oar/globalwarming.nsf/con
    tent/ResourceCenterPublicationsPatz_health.html
  • Pruss-Ustun A, Corvalan C. Preventing disease
    through healthy environments Towards an estimate
    of the environmental burden of disease. Geneva
    World Health Organization, 2006.
  • Rogers, D.J. and Randolph, S.E. (2006) Climate
    change and vector-borne diseases. Advances in
    Parasitology 62 345-381
  • WHO. Potential health effects of climatic change.
    World Health Organization, 1990.

27
RCN Congress 2007Mary Seacole MemorialGlobal
Warming the Future of Healthcare Nursing
Thank you for listening
  • Geoffrey Hunt BSc(Hons) MLitt PhD FIoN
  • University of Surrey, UK.
  • g.hunt _at_surrey.ac.uk
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