Climate Change and Children's Health: Building a Healthy Future for Every Child.

Pediatrics

Division of General Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital, and Center for Climate, Health, and the Global Environment, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Climate change, driven by fossil fuel emissions, is threatening the physical and mental health of children by altering climate stability, leading to extreme weather, and disrupting communities.
  • These impacts worsen existing inequalities and create long-term injustices that affect both current and future generations.
  • Pediatricians are stepping up as advocates for climate action, promoting policies aimed at reducing fossil fuel dependency and fostering healthier environments for children to ensure their well-being and equity now and in the future.

Article Abstract

The warming of our planet matters to every child. Driven by fossil fuel-generated greenhouse gas emissions, climate conditions stable since the founding of modern pediatrics in the mid-nineteenth century have shifted, and old certainties are falling away. Children's physical and mental health are threatened by climate change through its effects on temperature, precipitation, and extreme weather; ecological disruption; and community disruption. These impacts expose and amplify existing inequities and create unprecedented intergenerational injustice. Fossil fuel extraction and combustion cause harm today and reach centuries into the future, jeopardizing the health, safety, and prosperity of today's children and future generations. Appreciating the unique vulnerability of their patients, pediatricians have become leading health advocates for climate actions necessary to protect all living and future children. Policies that reduce reliance on fossil fuels and promote cleaner air, facilitate walking and bicycling, encourage more sustainable diets, increase access to nature, and develop more connected communities lead to immediate gains in child health and equity, and build a foundation for generations of children to thrive.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.2023-065504DOI Listing

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