November 15, 2023

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How climate change is making Australians sick, and how government policy is failing

Credit: CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Climate change presents a major public health concern in Australia, marked by unprecedented wildfires, heat waves, floods, droughts, and the spread of climate-sensitive infectious diseases.

A paper published in The Lancet Regional Health: Western Pacific details the rise in these events over the past two decades as well as the mitigation measures taken by national, state/territory and —with a call for greater inclusion of Indigenous Australians in developing these mitigation measures.

The paper, led by Monash University's Professor Yuming Guo, argues that Australia's response to the climate crisis has been inadequate and subject to change by politics, public sentiment, and global developments.

"Our findings reveal significant impacts of climate-related environmental extremes on the and well-being of Australians," Professor Guo said.

"While governments have implemented various adaptation strategies, these plans must be further developed to yield concrete actions. Moreover, Indigenous Australians should not be left out in these adaptation efforts."

Australia has experienced some of the world's most extreme weather events in the last decade including the world's largest, most catastrophic epidemic thunderstorm asthma event in 2016, the extensive and devastating bushfires and in the "Black Summer" of 2019/2020, and the record rainfalls and widespread and repeated flooding in 2021/2022.

According to Professor Guo, from the Monash University School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, "these events overwhelmed and , and led to considerable acute and chronic health impacts and deaths," he said.

"Australia has already warmed by 1.47°C on average since 1910, accompanied by more frequent and intense extreme events. The country has also experienced one of the greatest increases in bushfire risk globally, prolonged droughts in the southern parts of the country, and an anticipated increase in extreme floods in the wetter northern parts. These risks are likely to escalate with devastating consequences for Australia's population, economy and environment."

The paper warns that climate change may also worsen the health inequity that already exists between Indigenous and non-Indigenous populations, low and high socio-economic groups, and rural versus urban populations, with Australian agriculture and food security impacted by increased frequency of climate-related disasters.

Over 2 million Australian households (21%) had experienced severe food insecurity in the previous 12 months, and disasters such as floods, bushfires and drought contributed to 19% of the severe food insecurity.

The paper—commissioned by The Lancet—is highly critical of the way all Australian governments have dealt with the climate crisis.

"Australia's national responses to the climate crisis have been inadequate. Policy engagement by the former Federal Government was inadequate and limited, and climate change and have been addressed in a siloed and disconnected way at the national level," the paper said. "The Australian National Climate Resilience and Adaptation Strategy released in October 2021 did not put health at the center of the policies."

The paper points to a small selection of exceptions: the Western Australian Government's Climate Health Inquiry in 2020, which was the first statutory inquiry anywhere in the world focused on the health impacts of climate change; the Australian Medical Association (AMA) declaration of climate change as a health emergency in 2019, followed by other and medical associations, e.g., The Royal Australasian College of Physicians (RACP); and a 2022 Australian Academy of Health and Medical Sciences (AAHMS) report that highlighted climate change as an urgent health priority.

Key issues and health impacts:

More information: Rongbin Xu et al, Climate change, environmental extremes, and human health in Australia: challenges, adaptation strategies, and policy gaps, The Lancet Regional Health—Western Pacific (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.lanwpc.2023.100936

Provided by Monash University

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