Climate Alarmism on steroids, we are in a "global climate crisis"

You just gotta love the phrase “unprecedented shift in temperature”, as if somehow people aren’t able to handle climate shifts say, like the difference in average annual temperature between New York and Miami (which is far greater than that caused by climate change), or the fact that humans simultaneously inhabit Antarctica and Death Valley, CA. No, they simply can’t handle such shifts in temperature. The only conclusion here is that for their health, we must stop people from moving to different climates in order to save their health.

Experts assess the impact of climate change on public health

New Issue of the Annals of Global Health explores the health consequences of climate change and doctors urge action to help mitigate risks and prepare for new challenges

ELSEVIER HEALTH SCIENCES

New York, NY, March 1, 2016 – Climate change is already having a noticeable impact on the environment and global health. Around the world extreme weather events, increased temperatures, drought, and rising sea levels are all adversely affecting our ability to grow food, access clean water, and work safely outdoors. Soon in some areas, the transformation will be so drastic and devastating that native populations will be displaced and forced to find new homes as environmental refugees. In a review published in the Annals of Global Health, doctors warn of the impending public health crisis brought on by climate change and call for action to help prepare the world for what is ahead.

As we begin to experience an unprecedented shift in temperature, we are starting to see the immense impact climate change will have on people around the world, especially those living in low-income countries. Bearing the brunt of the damage caused by climate change, low-income nations are especially susceptible because their economies often rely solely on agriculture and most do not possess the resources to ease the risks posed by climate events.

Low-income countries contribute just a tiny fraction of greenhouse gases (GHG), yet, they stand to lose the most if something is not done to curb emissions. In 2004, the United States, Canada, and Australia approached 6 metric tons (mt) of GHG per capita, while per-capita GHG emissions in low-income countries was only 0.6 mt overall.

“As global temperature increases, rich countries’ economies continue to prosper, but the economic growth of poor countries is seriously impaired,” explained co-author Barry S. Levy, MD, MPH, Adjunct Professor, Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Tufts University School of Medicine. “The consequences for economic growth in poor countries will be substantial if we continue on a ‘business-as-usual’ path of increasing carbon dioxide concentrations and rapid climate change, with poor countries’ mean annual growth rate decreasing from 3.2% to 2.6%.”

The adverse health effects of climate change will be broad and will tax public health resources globally. Vector-borne diseases, foodborne and waterborne illnesses, malnutrition, respiratory and allergic disorders, heat-related disorders, collective violence, and mental health problems will all likely increase due to climate change. Already vulnerable populations including the poor, minority groups, women, children, and older people will face the greatest challenges brought on by climate-caused illness. Malaria, Rift Valley fever, tick-borne encephalitis, and West Nile virus disease are spreading due to climate change.

Along with minority populations and poor people, women are more vulnerable to the health consequences of climate change. Co-author investigator Jonathan A. Patz, MD, MPH, Director of the Global Health Institute at the University of Wisconsin–Madison explained, “There are many ways in which climate change disproportionately affects women, including and especially adolescent girls. In low-income countries, women and adolescent girls generally assume primary responsibility for gathering water, food, and fuel for their households. Climate change-induced droughts make this work much more difficult.”

Because the challenges presented by climate change disproportionately affect already vulnerable groups, investigators warn that caution must be exercised when trying to manage the effects of climate change. “International organizations and governments at the national, state/provincial, and local levels should ensure that human rights are considered in developing and implementing mitigation and adaptation measures,” noted Dr. Levy. “Nongovernmental and humanitarian organizations need to hold governments accountable in protecting and promoting these human rights.”

Positive progress on this front emerged last December in Paris from the UN Conference of the Parties (COP21) on climate change. World leaders gathered there agreed to establish a $100 billion fund to pay for both energy development as well as damages already incurred by poorer nations. “The agreement, which included the concept of ‘damages,’ clearly shows a recognition of the imbalance between industrialized nations that have caused climate change and those countries already bearing the brunt of extreme weather impacts,” said Dr. Patz, who attended the Paris meeting.

Now is the time to address these issues and determine proper plans of action. In this issue ofAnnals of Global Health, “Climate Change, Global Health, and Human Rights,” guest editor Holly G. Atkinson, MD, Program Director of Human Rights, Arnhold Institute for Global Health at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, explained, “In many places around the globe where upheavals are occurring, public health systems have broken down. As a consequence, for example, we have witnessed the resurgence of polio–an ancient disease almost eradicated in 2012. Despite the evidence, many people remain substantially uninformed about the link between climate change and global health.”

Public health problems resulting from climate change continue to increase, and yet, we are slow to react. With the most vulnerable populations among us set to sustain the most damage, this review in the Annals of Global Health urges swift and decisive action to protect poor people, women, children, older people, and other vulnerable populations from the health consequences of climate change now and in the future.

“The global climate crisis threatens most people and their human rights,” concluded Dr. Patz. “The adverse consequences of climate change will worsen. Addressing climate change is a health and human rights priority, and action cannot be delayed. Mitigation and adaptation measures must be equitable, respecting, protecting and promoting human rights.”

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asybot
March 1, 2016 6:58 pm

A bit of topic, but I went to look at Cook’s “Skeptical Science- John Cook site and looked at the home page, most of the articles had ZERO comments, kinda strange. (this what I tapped on, copied and pasted this a minute ago, it is in the right hand column).
* Due to (1) deletion, extension and amending of user comments, and (2) undated post-publication revisions of article contents after significant user commenting. I can’t figure out what he is trying to say.

MarkW
Reply to  asybot
March 2, 2016 6:25 am

Anyone who disagrees with the sites controllers is banned, so I guess there aren’t a lot of posters left.

Mike Bromley the Kurd
March 1, 2016 7:08 pm

“Climate change is already having a noticeable impact on the environment and global health. Around the world extreme weather events, increased temperatures, drought, and rising sea levels are all adversely affecting our ability to grow food, access clean water, and work safely outdoors.”
Plagiarists.

RockyRoad
Reply to  Mike Bromley the Kurd
March 1, 2016 8:47 pm

What I worry about most is why they’re “setting the table” with a meme by which they could suspend individual freedoms. They’re doing all they can to propagandize a fantasy so something must be up.

Logoswrench
March 1, 2016 7:13 pm

Or what about the unprecedented temperature shifts between day and night? Lol. Alarm!!Alarm!!!

Tom Judd
March 1, 2016 7:15 pm

‘Barry S. Levy, MD, MPH, Adjunct Professor, Department of Public Health and Community Medicine, Tufts University School of Medicine. “The consequences for economic growth in poor countries will be substantial if we continue … with poor countries’ mean annual growth rate decreasing from 3.2% to 2.6%.”’
Well Barry (appropriate name, that), you mean Barack Obama’s gonna’ be their president too?

KevinK
March 1, 2016 7:31 pm

NEWSFLASH…..World to End Tomorrow……Women, Children, Minorities, Poor People AND Climate Refugees Most Effected…….Film at 11……
Pardon me while I YAWN…….

Steve Oregon
March 1, 2016 7:50 pm

Is it too much to ask for a single, specific example (with location) of where and how one of these issues is occuring?

RockyRoad
Reply to  Steve Oregon
March 1, 2016 8:54 pm

That’s the beauty of their fantasy.

March 1, 2016 8:03 pm

I hereby declare that “unprecedented” is now officially the most overused and abused word in the English language.

KevinK
Reply to  Hoyt Clagwell
March 1, 2016 8:06 pm

Hoyt, it is totally unprecedented for anyone to declare words as “most overused”, like totally man…
But “I dig where you are coming from”……

Richard G
Reply to  Hoyt Clagwell
March 1, 2016 9:38 pm

Also the use of the word “robust” is unprecedented.

March 1, 2016 8:04 pm

I just find it very depressing – that these total morons who write and publish this garbage of lies and deceit STILL feel that they can get away with it.

Catcracking
March 1, 2016 8:19 pm

This report is rubbish.
It lacks any rational as to how the non existent global warming has the proclaimed impact.
Lacking any hard data to support their hypothesis, the alarmists resort to abstract scenarios with no logical connection given the fact that appaently the claimed warming occurs mostly due to a higher low rather than a higher high and the fact that the claimed warming is mostly not where many people live (Arctic)?

RockyRoad
Reply to  Catcracking
March 1, 2016 8:56 pm

They lie to us then they can control us and use the lies as justification. They’re evil through and through.

Richard
March 1, 2016 8:21 pm

Wow. Sounds like we are so vulnerable to climate change that we can’t survive.
It’s a good thing there has never been climate change in the past or humans wouldn’t have survived.

gnomish
March 1, 2016 8:33 pm

smells like a desperate push to keep the momentum.
this is the money.quote enshrined by the sermon:
“World leaders gathered there agreed to establish a $100 billion fund to pay for both energy development as well as damages already incurred by poorer nations.”
the money isn’t there yet, right?
there is a real possibility it won’t be if there’s a pause in the drumbeat.
the pause that refreshes!

March 1, 2016 8:38 pm

Temps keep going up.
“The Version 6.0 global average lower tropospheric temperature (LT) anomaly for February, 2016 is +0.83 deg. C, up almost 0.3 deg C from the January value of +0.54 deg. C (click for full size version), which is a new record for the warmest monthly anomaly since satellite monitoring began in late 1978.”
http://www.drroyspencer.com/2016/03/uah-v6-global-temperature-update-for-feb-2016-0-83-deg-c-new-record/

Reply to  George Roberts
March 1, 2016 9:33 pm

Temps have been going up for 400 years.
Good thing we didn’t try and stop it then or we’d still be in the Little Ice Age.

garymount
Reply to  George Roberts
March 2, 2016 4:09 am

Roy Spencer also reports that the tropics are about 0.3 C cooler than February 1998.

Richard Barraclough
Reply to  George Roberts
March 2, 2016 6:29 am

And the UAH Pause has well and truly vanished.
I wonder if the RSS Pause will suffer the same fate when February’s numbers come out this week?

4 eyes
March 1, 2016 8:45 pm

Far too many assertions that have no basis in fact or scientific experiment AFAIK. Would any alarmist try to quote scientific references for the more outrageous predictions in this article?

John Coleman
March 1, 2016 9:03 pm

We can assume that several million dollars of our taxes were granted to these doctors to “fund their research” which lead to the report presented here. I want to scream. I want to cry. I want to laugh. We can assume they truly believe that their paper is based on valid scientific calculations that confirm that man-kind’s use of fossil fuels which exhaust carbon dioxide into the air is having a profound negative impact on the climate of Earth. We can assume that they truly believe that 97% of scientists accept the global climate change predictions are valid beyond question and that widely publicized results of climate change underway are a horrid consequence of our burning of fossil fuels. We can assume that they regard people such as me who challenge the basic theory of carbon dioxide driving dramatic climate change as it interacts with water vapor in the atmosphere as pathetic losers who have sold out to the special interests who continue to power our civilization with fossil fuels. Yes, I want to scream. I want to cry.

Reply to  John Coleman
March 1, 2016 9:32 pm

I’ve laughed. I’ve screamed. I’ve cried.
Now I’m just numb.

F. Ross
March 1, 2016 9:06 pm

Ya’ know that stuff that comes out of the south end of a northbound horse?
That’s what this is all about.

Reply to  F. Ross
March 2, 2016 1:25 pm

Well said.

Robert
March 1, 2016 9:27 pm

This is not just ‘rubbish’. It is outrageously bad ‘science’. The idea that there is any evidence that the health and well being of humans is retrogressing is unequivocally wrong. For arguably the first time in history, human welfare has progressed enormously in the past 200 years, and this progress has greatly accelerated since WWII. There is simple scientific proof of this available to anyone with web access.
Simply visit gapminder.com and plot longevity and child mortality by country for the years 1945 to 2015. These statistics are highly reliable and don’t require ‘adjustments’. You can plainly see an inexorable march with greatly improved statistics in all regions of the world. To top it off, there is an accelerating trend of human welfare in sub-Sahara Africa over the past 15 years (despite the ravages of AIDS, ebola, and any other disease thrown in their way).
For a medical doctor to proclaim that AGW is a growing threat to the poorest of the poor is gross malpractice. The threat is posed by technocrats and technocrats in waiting who wish to impose a new world order with expensive energy.
I have a video which displays these statistics in compelling fashion but I am not familiar with how to post it in the comments section. Can anyone offer help there?

Mjw
March 1, 2016 10:05 pm

“THE CRISIS” is that they are realising that people have woken up to the scam.

Bob Denby
March 1, 2016 10:13 pm

Treating the authors of this screed with derision seems to be a common thread among the commentators (above) who, knowing better, understand its inaccuracies. BUT while so doing, our pockets are being picked big-time!
This movement is being led, skillfully, by serious opportunists who, given their way, have no interest in climate-change other than to use the fear of it’s claimed, man-caused change to defeat Capitalism world wide. Understanding the science (or lack thereof), while essential, isn’t enough to avoid the economic devastation these whackos have in store for us, given their way. The movement needs to be actively blocked at every turn!

commieBob
Reply to  Bob Denby
March 2, 2016 1:19 am

… our pockets are being picked big-time! …

Our pockets are being picked from all sides. The problem, like the climate, is complicated, wicked even. It’s not just the evil capitalists and rent seekers. It’s not just the evil commies like Obama and Naomi Klein.
The Tea Party and the Occupy Movement are symptoms of the same problem as are Trump and Sanders. Folks are seriously ticked off but don’t know where to put the blame. And for those who purport to have easy solutions –

There is always a well-known solution to every human problem–neat, plausible, and wrong. H. L. Mencken, Prejudices: Second Series, 1920

We do have a money pile problem:

“Money is like manure. If you spread it around, it does a lot of good. But if you pile it up in one place, it stinks like hell.” J. Paul Getty

Rather than investing their money and creating jobs, many corporations have just been letting it pile up. link link They have created big stinking piles of money. That’s one problem for sure.
Every activist views problems as an opportunity to push their change agenda. That includes the commies who want to bring down capitalism. We all know how that worked in Russia. On the other hand, the libertarians who view taxation as theft are equally wrong. I guarantee that the solution is not any of the easy, simple, obvious solutions being pushed on us from all sides.
So Bob, you aren’t wrong …

MarkW
Reply to  commieBob
March 2, 2016 6:29 am

When times are uncertain, doing nothing is often the best option.
To the extent that companies are sitting on cash, it’s because the political situation is so uncertain that it isn’t clear that there are any safe places left to invest it.

MarkW
Reply to  commieBob
March 2, 2016 6:30 am

As to taxation is theft, what do you call it when a man with a gun demands you hand over your money or else?
Just because a majority of people have voted to take your property, doesn’t make those actions right.

commieBob
Reply to  commieBob
March 2, 2016 9:58 am

MarkW says:
March 2, 2016 at 6:30 am
As to taxation is theft, what do you call it …

I call it carrying my weight.

MarkW
Reply to  commieBob
March 2, 2016 10:31 am

Fascinating how demanding that other people pay more in taxes is defined as carrying your weight?

MarkW
Reply to  commieBob
March 2, 2016 10:33 am

PS: Almost half of all citizens pay nothing in income taxes? Why don’t you demand that they start paying their weight?
The top 10% of income earners, despite earning only about 30% of all income pay over 50% of all income taxes. They are already carrying way more than their own already, yet there are those like you who want to shift even more of the burden onto them.

commieBob
Reply to  commieBob
March 2, 2016 10:42 am

MarkW says:
March 2, 2016 at 10:31 am
Fascinating how demanding that other people pay more in taxes is defined as carrying your weight?

No, paying my own taxes is carrying my own weight. Are you an anarchist? 🙂

commieBob
Reply to  commieBob
March 2, 2016 11:35 am

MarkW says:
March 2, 2016 at 10:33 am
PS: Almost half of all citizens pay nothing in income taxes? Why don’t you demand that they start paying their weight?

The ideal would be that everyone has a well-paying job or business. Then everyone could carry their weight and live with dignity.
As for people not paying taxes, it’s worse than just that. A whole bunch of people live on various government payments. One problematic group is people on disability pensions. The government is hiding unemployed people by putting them on disability. link That’s basically sweeping the problem under the rug.
I can’t find it now but I read a piece about a whole town where almost everybody was on disability. There were no jobs except fast food and the teenagers had all those. The story told about one woman who couldn’t even imagine what good jobs might be. The only one she could think of was the welfare administrator. 🙁 You and I are paying for that and it’s not doing any good for anyone.

MarkW
Reply to  commieBob
March 3, 2016 8:59 am

Commie, why do you get to decide what someone else’s fair share is?
What about the 90% of things that govt does that it has no business doing.
Wouldn’t everyone paying their fare share mean a poll tax?
You don’t have to be an anarchist to recognize that taxes are theft. There are times when one evil must be tolerated because greater evils would come if it weren’t. But that doesn’t disguise the fact that taking money form others by force is always an evil. Even if people you like benefit from it.

commieBob
Reply to  commieBob
March 3, 2016 12:38 pm

MarkW says:
March 3, 2016 at 8:59 am
… Wouldn’t everyone paying their fare share mean a poll tax?

That’s what Margaret Thatcher thought. [The resulting] “riot in central London did much to contribute to the downfall of Margaret Thatcher, who resigned as Prime Minister on November 28 the same year.” Poll tax riots
Lots of people offer simple solutions to our problems. One of those solutions involves getting rid of taxes. I would say it works about as well as Stalinism.
“The Price of Liberty is eternal vigilance.” I agree that the government is doing a bunch of stuff that it shouldn’t. It’s also not doing things it should. Congress doesn’t care what the people think. I don’t know how it’s going to happen but we have to take the reins back from our corrupt politicians. If the political establishment doesn’t get the message from the election of President Trump, things will only get worse. At least China is dealing with its corruption problem. [/rant]
MarkW if you and I agree on anything, I suspect it is our love of freedom.

Robin Hewitt
March 2, 2016 12:40 am

Perfectly understandable. The thought of a $100bn pie is bound to attract fund raisers from all over the world wanting a slice. Sadly a little research and you find it is pie in the sky, well, pie in the troposphere.

March 2, 2016 1:44 am

Having made a thorough study of all Climate Change proponents beginning with Albert Gore, the man who invented the internet, I find a strange fact that they also share a unique malady: GORP!
Those suffering from GORP [pruned] in a bathtub and bite the bubbles.
[Watch your language please. .mod]

March 2, 2016 2:03 am

If we all stop using fossil fuels, we will be much healthier.
Thats true because people lived longer in the 1300s and had much healthier lives.
I wish I could get the Black Plague instead of the Flu. I wish I had a horse instead of a car.
Take away all the machinery and give me hard labour anyday.

H.R.
Reply to  Owen
March 2, 2016 2:26 am

Ah, yes. Those were the good old days, Owen ;o)

StarkNakedTruth
Reply to  Owen
March 2, 2016 6:10 am

Yes sireee! Scratching out an existence in the dirt, dawn until dusk every day is my kind of fun!

Horace Jason Oxboggle
Reply to  StarkNakedTruth
March 2, 2016 10:15 pm

In my childhood we lived on gravel sandwiches (without the bread).

MarkW
Reply to  Owen
March 2, 2016 6:32 am

Over on National Review, I recently debated a young communist who was convinced that inventing agriculture was the worst mistake mankind ever made. He stated without equivocation that the hunter gatherer lifestyle was the ideal one for mankind.

commieBob
Reply to  MarkW
March 2, 2016 10:35 am

I have a cartoon for him. link Two cavemen:

“Something’s just not right—our air is clean, our water is pure, we all get plenty of exercise, everything we eat is organic and free-range, and yet nobody lives past thirty.

H.R.
Reply to  MarkW
March 2, 2016 1:21 pm

MarkW March 2, 2016 at 6:32 am

Over on National Review, I recently debated a young communist who was convinced that inventing agriculture was the worst mistake mankind ever made. He stated without equivocation that the hunter gatherer lifestyle was the ideal one for mankind.

Oh sure. Hunter-gathering is all grins and giggles until a bow string snaps and someone gets an eye put out.

Reply to  MarkW
March 3, 2016 3:57 am

I remember fondly those dark cold winter nights spent with a candle hoping I had some bread left to feed the kids.
Electricity robbed the joy out of my life.

George Lawson
March 2, 2016 2:25 am

One of the most laughable and ridiculous scaremongering reports ever to appear in WUWT. How sad that so many of our so called scientific elite have wondered so far into the fairyland of make believe in an effort to impose their ridiculous ‘end of the world’ scenario on the unthinking masses. One can only assume that they have all benefitted from massive fees from an excercise that rational scientests must find ciringing.

George Lawson
March 2, 2016 2:26 am

cringing

March 2, 2016 2:28 am

The Luddites have taken over. I guess this was predicted back in the early 1800s.
Modern medicine wouldnt exist if the fossil fuel revolution didnt happen.

hunter
March 2, 2016 4:16 am

Let’s see if this is a typical bit of Climate Imperialist propaganda: deceptive? Check. Derivative? Check. Fictional? Check. Yep, it quacks like a duck, and it waddles like a duck.