1. Six climate change-related events in the United States accounted for about $14 billion in lost lives and health costs.
- Author
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Knowlton K, Rotkin-Ellman M, Geballe L, Max W, and Solomon GM
- Subjects
- Databases, Factual, Disease Outbreaks, Environmental Pollution, Fires, Floods, History, 21st Century, Humans, United States epidemiology, Climate Change, Disasters economics, Health Care Costs history, Mortality trends
- Abstract
The future health costs associated with predicted climate change-related events such as hurricanes, heat waves, and floods are projected to be enormous. This article estimates the health costs associated with six climate change-related events that struck the United States between 2000 and 2009. The six case studies came from categories of climate change-related events projected to worsen with continued global warming-ozone pollution, heat waves, hurricanes, infectious disease outbreaks, river flooding, and wildfires. We estimate that the health costs exceeded $14 billion, with 95 percent due to the value of lives lost prematurely. Actual health care costs were an estimated $740 million. This reflects more than 760,000 encounters with the health care system. Our analysis provides scientists and policy makers with a methodology to use in estimating future health costs related to climate change and highlights the growing need for public health preparedness.
- Published
- 2011
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