4 results on '"Trtanj, J."'
Search Results
2. The potential impacts of climate variability and change on health impacts of extreme weather events in the United States.
- Author
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Greenough G, McGeehin M, Bernard SM, Trtanj J, Riad J, and Engelberg D
- Subjects
- Communicable Diseases etiology, Disaster Planning methods, Disasters economics, Ecosystem, Greenhouse Effect, Humans, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Mental Disorders etiology, Mortality, United States epidemiology, Wounds and Injuries epidemiology, Wounds and Injuries etiology, Climate, Disasters statistics & numerical data, Public Health, Weather
- Abstract
Extreme weather events such as precipitation extremes and severe storms cause hundreds of deaths and injuries annually in the United States. Climate change may alter the frequency, timing, intensity, and duration of these events. Increases in heavy precipitation have occurred over the past century. Future climate scenarios show likely increases in the frequency of extreme precipitation events, including precipitation during hurricanes, raising the risk of floods. Frequencies of tornadoes and hurricanes cannot reliably be projected. Injury and death are the direct health impacts most often associated with natural disasters. Secondary effects, mediated by changes in ecologic systems and public health infrastructure, also occur. The health impacts of extreme weather events hinge on the vulnerabilities and recovery capacities of the natural environment and the local population. Relevant variables include building codes, warning systems, disaster policies, evacuation plans, and relief efforts. There are many federal, state, and local government agencies and nongovernmental organizations involved in planning for and responding to natural disasters in the United States. Future research on health impacts of extreme weather events should focus on improving climate models to project any trends in regional extreme events and as a result improve public health preparedness and mitigation. Epidemiologic studies of health effects beyond the direct impacts of disaster will provide a more accurate measure of the full health impacts and will assist in planning and resource allocation.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The potential health impacts of climate variability and change for the United States: executive summary of the report of the health sector of the U.S. National Assessment.
- Author
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Patz JA, McGeehin MA, Bernard SM, Ebi KL, Epstein PR, Grambsch A, Gubler DJ, Reither P, Romieu I, Rose JB, Samet JM, and Trtanj J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Child, Preschool, Data Collection, Demography, Disasters, Female, Health Status Indicators, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, United States, Air Pollution adverse effects, Climate, Greenhouse Effect, Public Health
- Abstract
We examined the potential impacts of climate variability and change on human health as part of a congressionally mandated study of climate change in the United States. Our author team, comprising experts from academia, government, and the private sector, was selected by the federal interagency U.S. Global Change Research Program, and this report stems from our first 18 months of work. For this assessment we used a set of assumptions and/or projections of future climates developed for all participants in the National Assessment of the Potential Consequences of Climate Variability and Change. We identified five categories of health outcomes that are most likely to be affected by climate change because they are associated with weather and/or climate variables: temperature-related morbidity and mortality; health effects of extreme weather events (storms, tornadoes, hurricanes, and precipitation extremes); air-pollution-related health effects; water- and foodborne diseases; and vector- and rodent-borne diseases. We concluded that the levels of uncertainty preclude any definitive statement on the direction of potential future change for each of these health outcomes, although we developed some hypotheses. Although we mainly addressed adverse health outcomes, we identified some positive health outcomes, notably reduced cold-weather mortality, which has not been extensively examined. We found that at present most of the U.S. population is protected against adverse health outcomes associated with weather and/or climate, although certain demographic and geographic populations are at increased risk. We concluded that vigilance in the maintenance and improvement of public health systems and their responsiveness to changing climate conditions and to identified vulnerable subpopulations should help to protect the U.S. population from any adverse health outcomes of projected climate change.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Health and climate โ opportunities.
- Author
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Rogers, D.P., Shapiro, M.A., Brunet, G., Cohen, J-C., Connor, S.J., Diallo, A.A., Elliott, W., Haidong, K., Hales, S., Hemming, D., Jeanne, I., Lafaye, M., Mumba, Z., Raholijao, N., Rakotomanana, F., Teka, H., Trtanj, J., and Whung, P.-Y.
- Subjects
HEALTH ,CLIMATOLOGY ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL care ,EPIDEMICS - Abstract
Abstract: While Hippocrates recognized that health is influenced by the external environment, it is only recently that the relationship between health and climate has become a focus of community and public health services. Advances in understanding of weather and climate sciences on the one hand and human health on the other are providing new opportunities for early detection, prediction and prevention of the adverse health effects of hazards as diverse as tropical cyclones, floods, heatwaves and cold spells, air quality, wildfires, droughts and disease epidemics. Early warning of disease outbreaks and a timely response makes prevention possible. For some climate-sensitive diseases, our understanding is sufficient to make health forecasting possible; for others, the relationship between the disease and any causal environmental effect remains unclear, and the focus of active research programs. Institutional changes are also taking place to improve operational and research cooperation between the health sector and the weather and climate communities, ranging from joint service delivery platforms to combined research and development programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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