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Global Climate Change and Public Health
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Main description:

Pulmonary physicians and scientists currently have minimal capacity to respond to climate change and its impacts on health. The extent to which climate change influences the prevalence and incidence of respiratory morbidity remains largely undefined. However, evidence is increasing that climate change does drive respiratory disease onset and exacerbation as a result of increased ambient and indoor air pollution, desertification, heat stress, wildfires, and the geographic and temporal spread of pollens, molds and infectious agents. Preliminary research has revealed climate change to have potentially direct and indirect adverse impacts on respiratory health. Published studies have linked climate change to increases in respiratory disease, including the following: changing pollen releases impacting asthma and allergic rhinitis, heat waves causing critical care-related diseases, climate driven air pollution increases, exacerbating asthma and COPD, desertification increasing particulate matter (PM) exposures, and climate related changes in food and water security impacting infectious respiratory disease through malnutrition (pneumonia, upper respiratory infections). High level ozone and ozone exposure has been linked to idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, lung cancer, and acute lower respiratory infection.

Global Climate Change and Public Health is an important new volume based on the research, findings, and discussions of US and international experts on respiratory health and climate change. This volume addresses issues of major importance to respiratory health and fills a major gap in the current literature.

The ATS Climate Change and Respiratory Health Workshop was held in New Orleans, Louisiana, on May 15, 2010. The purpose of the meeting was to address the threat to global respiratory health posed by climate change. The workshop was attended by domestic and international experts as well as representatives of international respiratory societies and key US federal agencies. Dr. Pinkerton and Dr. Rom, the editors of this title, were co-chairs of the Climate Change Workshop and Symposium.


Feature:

Editors were co-chairs of the 2010 ATS Climate Change and Respiratory Health Workshop

Contributors are domestic and international experts on respiratory health and climate change

Addresses direct and indirect adverse impacts on respiratory health as a result of climate change


Back cover:

Pulmonary physicians and scientists currently have minimal capacity to respond to climate change and its impacts on health. The extent to which climate change influences the prevalence and incidence of respiratory morbidity remains largely undefined. However, evidence is increasing that climate change does drive respiratory disease onset and exacerbation as a result of increased ambient and indoor air pollution, desertification, heat stress, wildfires, and the geographic and temporal spread of pollens, molds and infectious agents. Preliminary research has revealed climate change to have potentially direct and indirect adverse impacts on respiratory health. Published studies have linked climate change to increases in respiratory disease, including the following: changing pollen releases impacting asthma and allergic rhinitis, heat waves causing critical care-related diseases, climate driven air pollution increases, exacerbating asthma and COPD, desertification increasing particulate matter (PM) exposures, and climate related changes in food and water security impacting infectious respiratory disease through malnutrition (pneumonia, upper respiratory infections). High level ozone and ozone exposure has been linked to idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, lung cancer, and acute lower respiratory infection.

Global Climate Change and Public Health is an important new volume based on the research, findings, and discussions of US and international experts on respiratory health and climate change. This volume addresses issues of major importance to respiratory health and fills a major gap in the current literature.

The ATS Climate Change and Respiratory Health Workshop was held in New Orleans, Louisiana, on May 15, 2010. The purpose of the meeting was to address the threat to global respiratory health posed by climate change. The workshop was attended by domestic and international experts as well as representatives of international respiratory societies and key US federal agencies. Dr. Pinkerton and Dr. Rom, the editors of this title, were co-chairs of the Climate Change Workshop and Symposium.


Contents:

1. Introduction:  Consequences of Global Warming to the Public’s Health

William N. Rom and Kent Pinkerton

 

2. Climate Variability and Change Data and Information for Global Public Health

Juli Trtanj

 

3. Climate Change: Overview of Data Sources, Observed and Predicted Temperature Changes, and Impacts on Public and Environmental Health

David H. Levinson and Christopher J. Fettig

 

4. Eyewitness to Global Warming

Will Steger and Nicole Rom

 

5. California and Climate Changes

Rupa Basu

 

6. Heat Waves and Rising Temperatures: Human Health Impacts and the Determinants of Vulnerability

Helene G. Margolis

 

7. Climate, Air Quality and Allergy: Emerging Methods for Detecting Linkages

Patrick L. Kinney, Perry E. Sheffield, and Kate R. Weinberger

 

8. The Human Health Co-benefits of Air Quality Improvements Associated with Climate Change Mitigation

George D. Thurston and Michelle L. Bell

 

9. Asthma, Hayfever, Pollen, and Climate Change

Anthony M. Szema

 

10. Dengue Fever and Climate Change

Lauren Cromar and Kevin Cromar

 

11. Impact of Climate Change on Vector-Borne Disease in the Amazon

William Pan, OraLee Branch, and Benjamin Zaitchik

 

12. Climate Variability and Change: Food, Water and Societal Impacts

Jonathan Patz

 

13. Household Air Pollution from Cookstoves: Impacts on Health and Climate

William J Martin II, John W. Hollingsworth, and Veerabhadran Ramanathan

 

14. Biomass Fuel and Lung Diseases: An Indian Perspective

Rajendra Prasad and Rajiv Garg

 

15. The effects of climate change and air pollution on children and mothers’ health

Roya Kelishadi and Parinaz Poursafa

 

16. Climate Change and Public Health in Small Island States and Caribbean Countries

Muge Akpinar-Elci and Hugh Sealy

 

17. Global Climate Change, Desertification, and Its Consequences in Turkey and the Middle East

Hasan Bayram and Ayşe Bilge Öztürk

 

18. Assessing the Health Risks of Climate Change

Kristie Ebi

 

19. Federal Programs in Climate Change and Health Research

Maya Levine and John Balbus

 

20. Management of Climate Change Adaptation at the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Jeremy Hess, Gino Marinucci, Paul J. Schramm, Arie Manangan, and George Luber

 

21. Public Health and Climate Programs at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Erika N. Sasser and C.A. (Andy) Miller

 

22. California’s Cap-and-Trade Program

John R. Balmes


PRODUCT DETAILS

ISBN-13: 9781461484165
Publisher: Springer (Springer New York)
Publication date: September, 2013
Pages: 425
Weight: 842g
Availability: Not available (reason unspecified)
Subcategories: Diseases and Disorders, General Practice, Public Health, Respiratory Medicine

MEET THE AUTHOR

Kent E. Pinkerton, PhD, is a Professor in the Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine and Professor In-Residence, Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Cell Biology, School of Veterinary Medicine at UC Davis.  He is also Director of the Center for Health and the Environment at the John Muir Institute of the Environment.  Dr. Pinkerton’s research is on health effects of environmental air pollutants on lung structure and function, the interaction of gases and airborne particles within specific sites and cell populations of the lungs in acute and chronic lung injury, and the effects of environmental tobacco smoke on lung growth and development.  He is also a member of the Assembly for Environmental and Occupational Health of the American Thoracic Society.

 

William N. Rom, MD, MPH, has been at NYU since 1989 as Professor of Medicine and Environmental Medicine and Director of the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine. The Division has 75 full-time faculty and over 25 fellows. His research is on early detection of lung cancer, environmental lung disease, TB/AIDS, and air pollution. He and his faculty have been awarded over $125M in NIH and CDC grants over the years. He is editor of 4 editions of Environmental and Occupational Medicine and 2 editions of Tuberculosis. He has published over 200 peer reviewed articles. He Chairs the American Thoracic Society's Environmental Health Policy Committee that advocates science-based air pollution standards. He has been a Fellow in the Department of Interior on National Parks and was a Senior Investigator at the NHLBI, NIH for 6 years deciphering the mechanisms of asbestosis. He was a Legislative Fellow for Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton and wrote the Family Asthma Bill, the Caribbean Wilderness Act, and the National Environmental Public Health Tracking Bill. He was the Founder and Director of the Rocky Mountain Center for Occupational and Environmental Health at the University of Utah.

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From the reviews:

“This book analyzes and evaluates outcomes of climate change on geo-meteorological and on susceptible population bases. … the book may be as useful to planners and public policy experts in modifying or even creating appropriate policies to contend with these changes. … Given its authorship by U.S. and international experts on respiratory health and climate change, the book should find readership in similarly constituted groups. … This book is essential reading at the highest levels of government and infrastructure.” (J. Thomas Pierce, Doody’s Book Reviews, May, 2014)