'Blackout towns' named

A leaked document shows that a number of municipalities are not paying their Eskom accounts and may end up without electricity.

Old Gs never die

Leave the grandstanding to the G20 - the G7 is where the real talking gets done, says CNN International Correspondent Richard Quest.
Where am I? Fin24.com  > Economy

Climate change impacts health

Apr 07 2008 10:27

Geneva - Turning sixty is usually a time to start winding down and think of retirement, but the World Health Organisation is using this milestone as a spur to its greatest challenge yet - climate change.


The WHO already warned three years ago that global warming was a key cause of up to 150 000 deaths and 5 million illnesses each year, be it from heat waves or the higher risk of natural disasters such as floods, droughts and typhoons.


Similarly, the Nobel Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned last year that malaria, cholera, malnutrition, heatstroke and pollen allergies are all set to worsen as the world's temperatures rise.


Climate change has already extended the range of mosquitoes and ticks, helped spread diarrhoeal disease, boosted the length and location of pollen seasons and pumped up the intensity of dangerous heat waves, the IPCC said in a report.


"Adverse health impacts will be greatest in low-income countries,"
the report said.


"Those at greater risk include, in all countries, the urban poor, the elderly and children, traditional societies, subsistence farmers and coastal populations." Chan, a former director of public health in Hong Kong and the first Chinese national to head a UN institution, said the organisation was well placed to meet its future challenges.


The WHO was born in the shadow of the Second World War on April 7, 1948 at a time when infectious diseases such as cholera threatened a world weakened by six bloody years of conflict.


Sixty years later and numbering 193 member states, the Geneva-based WHO is concerned with a whole host of health issues, from smoking to road safety, as well as the threats of Aids, Sars and bird flu.


This would appear more than enough for any organisation but WHO
Director General Margaret Chan has chosen this anniversary year to address the issue of climate change and its implications for public health the world over.


"Sixty years ago, when WHO was founded, public health faced the daunting task of restoring basic health services in a world badly damaged by war," she said in a statement.


Since then, "the challenges confronting public health have changed in profound ways. In today's closely interdependent and interconnected world, health problems are increasingly shaped by the same powerful forces, creating universal threats," Chan said.


"As a mature institution, WHO enters its seventh decade fully aware of the challenges, yet bolstered by the optimism that has characterised this Organisation since its inception," she said.


- Sapa

 

Add your comment

(No bad language or hate speech, please)

    

 
Your name  
Email  
Comment
(500 characters remaining)
 

 
Please enter the text below(Case sensitive)
 
 
If you can see the following field, please ignore it, as it is used to verify that you are human.

 
  Disclaimer

Fin24.com encourages freedom of speech and the expression of diverse views. The views of users published on Fin24.com are therefore their own and do not represent the views of Fin24.com. All posts are monitored by Fin24.com's editors and grossly derogatory posts will be deleted. The Fin24.com editorial team will delete your comment should you post abusive comments, use vulgar language or make discriminatory observations.

Company Snapshot

Video

5 questions with John Munro
2010/02/08 05:25:00 PM

Fin24.com spoke to the Rand Uranium CEO at the 2010 Mining Indaba about the company's planned R3.5bn plant. Time: 2:08

Search engine friendly content

Blogs

Podcasts