• Chest · May 2013

    Lungs in a warming world: climate change and respiratory health.

    • Aaron S Bernstein and Mary B Rice.
    • Center for Health and the Global Environment, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA; Division of General Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA. Electronic address: aaron.bernstein@childrens.harvard.edu.
    • Chest. 2013 May 1; 143 (5): 1455-1459.

    AbstractClimate change is a health threat no less consequential than cigarette smoking. Increased concentrations of greenhouse gases, and especially CO₂, in the earth's atmosphere have already warmed the planet substantially, causing more severe and prolonged heat waves, temperature variability, air pollution, forest fires, droughts, and floods, all of which put respiratory health at risk. These changes in climate and air quality substantially increase respiratory morbidity and mortality for patients with common chronic lung diseases such as asthma and COPD and other serious lung diseases. Physicians have a vital role in addressing climate change, just as they did with tobacco, by communicating how climate change is a serious, but remediable, hazard to their patients.

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