More needed to prevent deaths from climate-change driven heat waves, fires: report
OTTAWA — A new report examining the health impacts of climate change says more Canadians than ever are facing serious health risks from heat waves and wildfires, prompting warnings from doctors that we need to do more to adapt to the reality of a warmer planet.
The annual Lancet Countdown study looks at more than three dozen markers for human health impacts of climate change globally.
“This year we saw people suffering intense heat waves, deadly floods and wildfires,” said lead author Marina Romanello, a biochemist at London’s Institute for Global Health.
“These are grim warnings that for every day that we delay our response to climate change, the situation gets more critical.”