Abstract

As human-driven climate change advances, many adults fret about the losses of livelihoods, houses and farms that may result. Children fret about their parents’ worries and about information they hear, but do not really understand about the world’s climate and perhaps about their own futures. In chronically worried or anxious children, blood cortisol levels rise and adverse changes accrue in various organ systems that prefigure adult-life diseases. Meanwhile, for many millions of children in poor countries who hear little news and live with day-to-day fatalism, climate change threatens the fundamentals of life—food sufficiency, safe drinking water and physical security—and heightens the risks of diarrhoeal disease, malaria and other climate-sensitive infections. Poor and disadvantaged populations, and especially their children, will bear the brunt of climate-related trauma, disease and premature death over the next few decades and, less directly, from social disruption, impoverishment and displacement. The recent droughts in Somalia as the Indian Ocean warmed and monsoonal rains failed, on top of chronic civil war, forced hundreds of thousands of Somali families into north-eastern Kenya’s vast Dadaab refugee camps, where, for children, shortages of food, water, hygiene and schooling has endangered physical, emotional and mental health. Children warrant special concern, both as children per se and as the coming generation likely to face ever more extreme climate conditions later this century. As children, they face diverse risks, from violent weather, proliferating aeroallergens, heat extremes and mobilised microbes, through to reduced recreational facilities, chronic anxieties about the future and health hazards of displacement and local resource conflict. Many will come to regard their parents’ generation and complacency as culpable.

Highlights

  • Human-driven climate change is well and truly with us

  • We cannot realistically imagine what that world would either look or be like, nor how social, economic and political conditions might have changed in ways that would have many consequences for child wellbeing, health and, in some regions, physical survival

  • In the foreseeable future children around the world will be at risk of many and various adverse health outcomes

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Human-driven climate change is well and truly with us. It will have wide-ranging and mostly damaging or disruptive effects on the natural and built environments and on many of the human interactions with them. Beyond the widespread risks to children of diarrhoeal and respiratory infections, of exposures to mosquito-borne infections, of food shortage and under-nutrition, with stunting of physical and intellectual development and blunting of immune system development and functioning, there is a wide penumbra of mental and emotional health disorders. Children fret about their parents’ worries and will often hear reference to the world’s increasing environmental problems and losses, they usually cannot fully understand their import. Especially their children, will bear the brunt of climate-related illness, disease, trauma and premature death over the few decades, including from climate-related social disruption, impoverishment and displacement [3]

Intrinsically High Health Risks in Children
Children as Transmitters of Knowledge and Understanding
Mitigation
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.